Language, Band 50George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1974 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 94
Seite 236
... phonetics ' , where only a fixed finite number of distinct values are possible for each phonetic variable , and hence there is only a finite set of possible segments . To justify this hypothesis it would be necessary ( a ) to show that ...
... phonetics ' , where only a fixed finite number of distinct values are possible for each phonetic variable , and hence there is only a finite set of possible segments . To justify this hypothesis it would be necessary ( a ) to show that ...
Seite 237
... Phonetics is universal ; but an utterance cannot adequately be transcribed phonetically by a finite array of symbols drawn from a finite alphabet , because many phonetic dimensions are continuous ( e.g. vowel aperture , pitch ) ; hence ...
... Phonetics is universal ; but an utterance cannot adequately be transcribed phonetically by a finite array of symbols drawn from a finite alphabet , because many phonetic dimensions are continuous ( e.g. vowel aperture , pitch ) ; hence ...
Seite 495
... phonetic constraint is defined in terms of independently motivated constraints on syncope which provide a rationale for its existence , since the effect of the constraint is to maximize phonetic outputs which are unmarked and which show ...
... phonetic constraint is defined in terms of independently motivated constraints on syncope which provide a rationale for its existence , since the effect of the constraint is to maximize phonetic outputs which are unmarked and which show ...
Inhalt
The arguments about deep structure | 423 |
Deepstructure appositive and complement NPs | 446 |
Double nominatives in Chinese | 455 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
abstract adjectives adverbs alternative analysis anaphoric appear apply arguments assumed chimpanzees Chomsky claim clause clusters complex consonants constraints context contrast copula deep structure deixis deletion derivational history dialects discussion distinction Dravidian Elamite English environment Epenthesis evidence examples extrinsic ordering fact function geminate Genie given glossolalia grammar hypothesis interpretation involved John killed Bill Kiparsky labial Lakoff language lexical Linguistic Society markedness meaning morpheme nasal nominals normal noted nouns objective content obstruents occur Pāṇini paper phonetic phonological rules phrasal verbs phrases pitch position possible precedence predicate present problem pronouns proposed question reference relations relative relative clause relevant representations restriction Sanskrit semantic sentences sequences speaker specific speech standard theory stem stress string structural description suffix syllable syntactic syntax tion tone transformational transformational grammar turn-taking underlying University unmarked utterance variable verb vowel vowel harmony words