Language, Band 45,Ausgaben 1-2George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1969 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 30
Seite 10
... completely comparable conditions ? Here the usual points about bor- rowing , dialect mixture , analogy , homonym prevention , the effects of tabu and phonetic symbolism , and functional load suggest themselves . Contrasted with the ...
... completely comparable conditions ? Here the usual points about bor- rowing , dialect mixture , analogy , homonym prevention , the effects of tabu and phonetic symbolism , and functional load suggest themselves . Contrasted with the ...
Seite 207
... completely regular . ' It seems always to have been assumed that the underlying forms here had voiceless initial consonants , and that such consonants became voiced ( but not always ) when the form in question was the second member of a ...
... completely regular . ' It seems always to have been assumed that the underlying forms here had voiceless initial consonants , and that such consonants became voiced ( but not always ) when the form in question was the second member of a ...
Seite 430
... completely sporadic variants which show reflexes of * y and vice versa . In addition , there is an even greater variation between * j and * y . In his recent work on comparative Bantu ( 1967 : 114 ) , Guthrie has to reconstruct no less ...
... completely sporadic variants which show reflexes of * y and vice versa . In addition , there is an even greater variation between * j and * y . In his recent work on comparative Bantu ( 1967 : 114 ) , Guthrie has to reconstruct no less ...
Inhalt
CONTENTS | 97 |
Notes 950 | 134 |
Publications received 952 | 230 |
Urheberrecht | |
3 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
allow alternation American analysis appear break called chapter clause common comparative consider consonant construction contains contrast course derived dialects dictionary discussion distinction distribution English evidence example expected fact Figure forms Friend function further German give given grammar important indicate instances interesting interpretation involved Japanese kind language later least less light linguistic marked material meaning morphemes nature noise noted noun object occur original pattern phonetic phonological phrase position possible present probably problem question reason reference relation relative respect response result rule seems sense sentence similar sound speakers speech statement structure suffix suggest syllable syntactic Table theory tion traditional UNIT University utterance verb vowel Webster