Language, Band 50George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1974 |
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Seite 86
... marked and morphologically complex , i.e. they are nominalizations based on the marked adjectives long and high : having [ + length ] → being longm → having lengthm having [ + height , ] being high , having heightm - > - > Homonymity ...
... marked and morphologically complex , i.e. they are nominalizations based on the marked adjectives long and high : having [ + length ] → being longm → having lengthm having [ + height , ] being high , having heightm - > - > Homonymity ...
Seite 87
... marked fleshiness , a nominalization from marked fleshy with a meaning something like ' great flesh - having ' ; marked fleshiness behaves just like shortness in this respect . Thus , in a question like How fleshy are her ears ?, the ...
... marked fleshiness , a nominalization from marked fleshy with a meaning something like ' great flesh - having ' ; marked fleshiness behaves just like shortness in this respect . Thus , in a question like How fleshy are her ears ?, the ...
Seite 482
... marked as well as unmarked sonorant - obstruent clusters . Third , a problem arises from the fact that sonorants ... marked values when the same features in an adjacent segment are marked . To handle such assimilations , phonological ...
... marked as well as unmarked sonorant - obstruent clusters . Third , a problem arises from the fact that sonorants ... marked values when the same features in an adjacent segment are marked . To handle such assimilations , phonological ...
Inhalt
The application of phonological | 1 |
Constraints on global rules in phonology | 29 |
Phonological features problems and proposals | 52 |
Urheberrecht | |
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adjectives alternative analysis appear apply arguments aspects assumed Chomsky claim clause communication complex considered consonants constraints contain context contrast course deep structure deletion derived determined dialects discussion distinction English environment evidence examples existence fact final function given grammar hypothesis important indicate interesting interpretation involved John kind language learning lexical linguistic marked meaning natural nominals normal noted nouns object observed occur particular phonetic phonological position possible precedence predicate present Press principle probably problem proposed question Raising reason reference relations relative relevant representations represented respect restriction result rule seems segments semantic sentences sequences speaker specific speech stress structure suggest surface syntactic theory tion tone transformational turn underlying University variable verb vowel