Language, Band 45,Ausgaben 1-2George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1969 |
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Seite 76
... examples . In each example , we assume one brancher , one category , and one word ( see Table 2 ) . In the first example , the response gc1 Ride is always chosen and the utterance is always Ride . This is the bounded case with m = 1 ...
... examples . In each example , we assume one brancher , one category , and one word ( see Table 2 ) . In the first example , the response gc1 Ride is always chosen and the utterance is always Ride . This is the bounded case with m = 1 ...
Seite 171
... example , his statement , ' Until you learn to hear the difference between , for example , bed and bad ... it is practically impossible to pronounce them differently , except sometimes by luck ' ( 80 ) , may need qualification in the ...
... example , his statement , ' Until you learn to hear the difference between , for example , bed and bad ... it is practically impossible to pronounce them differently , except sometimes by luck ' ( 80 ) , may need qualification in the ...
Seite 426
... example , his discussion ( 45 , $ 5.9.9.7 ) of another transformational situation , where he speaks of resolving instances of constructional homonymity ' by returning them to their underlying strings , if they occur in the language . In ...
... example , his discussion ( 45 , $ 5.9.9.7 ) of another transformational situation , where he speaks of resolving instances of constructional homonymity ' by returning them to their underlying strings , if they occur in the language . In ...
Inhalt
CONTENTS | 97 |
Notes 950 | 134 |
Publications received 952 | 230 |
Urheberrecht | |
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alternation American analysis appear Arabic CDIAL chapter Chomsky classical consonant construction contrast dative deletion derived dialects dictionary DIMETER diphthongization discussion distinction Dyirbal Edgerton English English language etymologies evidence example fact forms function German grammar Hittite Indo-European inflection instances interpretation Japanese Kloss Kota labial labial consonant language lexical linguistic Loca Loglan Macuch Mandaic markedness meaning metrical modern morphemes morphophonemic noise Nosek noun occur onomatopoetic pada-initial pairs pattern phonetic phonological phonons phrase position predicate present probably problem pronunciation prosodic question reduplicated reference relation relative clause relevant Rigveda rule Rumanian Ruwet Sahaptin Sanskrit seems segment semantic semivowels sentence sound change speakers speech statement structure suffix syntactic syntax Table tagmeme theory tion tone traditional transformational trimeter Tulu University utterance verb vowel vowel harmony Webster words