Language, Band 50George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1974 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 89
Seite 29
... natural language . All empirically defensible cases of derivational history are characteristically restricted to ... natural language . We , as linguists , are therefore concerned with pro- posing a theoretical model which describes ...
... natural language . All empirically defensible cases of derivational history are characteristically restricted to ... natural language . We , as linguists , are therefore concerned with pro- posing a theoretical model which describes ...
Seite 52
... natural ' ( i.e. intersecting or cross - classifying ) classes which func- tion in the phonological processes of natural language , and that it provide for the phonological contrasts of each language . I will attempt to show that the ...
... natural ' ( i.e. intersecting or cross - classifying ) classes which func- tion in the phonological processes of natural language , and that it provide for the phonological contrasts of each language . I will attempt to show that the ...
Seite 565
... Natural rules in phonology ' , also takes up the matter of naturalness , categorizing most natural rules as of three types : ( 1 ) assimilation rules , ( 2 ) preferred syllable - structure rules , and ( 3 ) maximum differentiation . On ...
... Natural rules in phonology ' , also takes up the matter of naturalness , categorizing most natural rules as of three types : ( 1 ) assimilation rules , ( 2 ) preferred syllable - structure rules , and ( 3 ) maximum differentiation . On ...
Inhalt
The application of phonological | 1 |
Constraints on global rules in phonology | 29 |
Phonological features problems and proposals | 52 |
Urheberrecht | |
33 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
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