Language, Band 19George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1943 |
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Seite 85
... beginning of a speech utterance , no iy- , uw- , rr- etc. existed in IE . Where they or their apparent resultants exist in historic languages in word - initial , they are either new creations since IE times , or inheritances from IE ...
... beginning of a speech utterance , no iy- , uw- , rr- etc. existed in IE . Where they or their apparent resultants exist in historic languages in word - initial , they are either new creations since IE times , or inheritances from IE ...
Seite 98
... beginning in two non - syllabic semivowels [ ywa ] were originally proper only after a word ending in a short vowel [ ǎ ywa ] , as under the rule of §26 , and could never be used at the beginning of a speechutterance . Though this rule ...
... beginning in two non - syllabic semivowels [ ywa ] were originally proper only after a word ending in a short vowel [ ǎ ywa ] , as under the rule of §26 , and could never be used at the beginning of a speechutterance . Though this rule ...
Seite 102
... beginning [ iwa ] are compounds of the negative a- ( from ṇ- ) with words beginning in y- , v- , etc .; these may so obviously be due to analogy that they seem not worth studying . 46. A summary balance of the evidence supporting ...
... beginning [ iwa ] are compounds of the negative a- ( from ṇ- ) with words beginning in y- , v- , etc .; these may so obviously be due to analogy that they seem not worth studying . 46. A summary balance of the evidence supporting ...
Inhalt
I | 1 |
Preterite Formant | 19 |
kiel Robert A Hall Jr Thomas A Sebeok 2 M B Emeneau | 42 |
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accent according American analogical analysis appears assume beginning beside bound clear common comparative connection consonant contains derived dialects discussion element ending English evidence examples existence explained expression fact final formation forms French give given grade grammar Greek Hall heavy included Indic initial Italian Italy language laryngeal later Latin least light linguistic material meaning noun object occur original perhaps person phoneme pitch accent position possible preceded present preterite probably pronoun recorded reduced reference regular represented result root seems semivowel Serving short vowel similar Society sound southern speech stem suffix suggested syllable taxemes tense texts tion treatment University verb verbal vocalic words writing written