Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 80
Seite 1
But if we also take the ideals of simplicity and self - consistency , we have the basis for a non - arbitrary method , particularly in view of the essentially systematic nature of phonetic totalities . The aim of a phonemic analysis may ...
But if we also take the ideals of simplicity and self - consistency , we have the basis for a non - arbitrary method , particularly in view of the essentially systematic nature of phonetic totalities . The aim of a phonemic analysis may ...
Seite 2
A phonetic feature which generally has to be considered is syllabic treatment , whether the long consonant goes with one syllable ( is unisyllabic ) or with two ( is ambisyllabic ) . As in other phonemic problems , word division often ...
A phonetic feature which generally has to be considered is syllabic treatment , whether the long consonant goes with one syllable ( is unisyllabic ) or with two ( is ambisyllabic ) . As in other phonemic problems , word division often ...
Seite 6
Sometimes long consonants conceived as geminate clusters involve a phonetic specialization of the first of the pair of phonemes . Thus , Arabic t k are ordinarily aspirated when they occur in syllabic final , e.g. k in Egyptian Arabic ...
Sometimes long consonants conceived as geminate clusters involve a phonetic specialization of the first of the pair of phonemes . Thus , Arabic t k are ordinarily aspirated when they occur in syllabic final , e.g. k in Egyptian Arabic ...
Was andere dazu sagen - Rezension schreiben
Es wurden keine Rezensionen gefunden.
Inhalt
CONTENTS OF VOLUME | 1 |
E? and EU in Germanic Strong Preterits | 11 |
Celtic Notes | 21 |
27 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
American appears assume become Beow beside breaking cited common compared connection consonant course derived dialects discussion distinction early elements ending English etymology evidence examples existence explained expressed fact final forms French frequent further genitive Germanic gerund give given Goth grade Greek hand historical Hittite indicated Indo-European influence initial interpretation king languages later Latin less linguistic meaning middle nasal noun object occur original passage perhaps person phonetic plural position possible present probably PROFESSOR reason reference relation represented root Sanskrit seems semantic sense short similar Society sound stem stop suffix suggested syllable tion University usual verb voiced vowel word writing þat