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It seems always to have been assumed that the underlying forms here had voiceless initial consonants , and that ... of the -i and subsequent consonant assimilation ) , resulting in geminate consonants , & new development in Japanese ...
It seems always to have been assumed that the underlying forms here had voiceless initial consonants , and that ... of the -i and subsequent consonant assimilation ) , resulting in geminate consonants , & new development in Japanese ...
Seite 319
... left half of Table 3 , the interference of the generalized labiality MSC with the labial consonant MSC ranges from 40 % to 100 % ( the latter being the limiting case , where the labial consonant MSC ceases to be present at all ) .
... left half of Table 3 , the interference of the generalized labiality MSC with the labial consonant MSC ranges from 40 % to 100 % ( the latter being the limiting case , where the labial consonant MSC ceases to be present at all ) .
Seite 405
Rule 2 laxes the non - high thematic vowel Al before a single consonant . Laxing the thematic vowel makes it subject to vowel fronting ( rule 6 ) . It is to be noted that / e / occurs only in the third person plural ...
Rule 2 laxes the non - high thematic vowel Al before a single consonant . Laxing the thematic vowel makes it subject to vowel fronting ( rule 6 ) . It is to be noted that / e / occurs only in the third person plural ...
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Inhalt
Competing changes as a cause of residue | 9 |
Proper nouns in English | 26 |
Relative clauses and possessive phrases in two Australian languages | 35 |
Urheberrecht | |
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alternation American analysis appear apply break called chapter child common comparative complex consider consonant construction contains contrast course derived dialects dictionary discussion distinction distribution English evidence example expected fact Figure formal forms function further German give given grammar indicate instances interesting interpretation involved Japanese kind labial language later least less light linguistic marked meaning morphemes nature noise noted noun object occur original pairs pattern phonetic phonological phrase position possible present probably problem question reason reference relation relative clause respect response result rule seems sense sentence similar sound speakers speech statement structure suffix suggest syllable syntactic Table theory tion transformational UNIT University utterance verb vowel