Language, Band 45,Ausgaben 1-2George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1969 |
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Seite 15
... morphemes is affected . Some of the affected morphemes may change to the Y - pronunciation directly . Other morphemes , however , will at first have both the X - pronunciation and the Y - pronunciation , fluctuating either randomly or ...
... morphemes is affected . Some of the affected morphemes may change to the Y - pronunciation directly . Other morphemes , however , will at first have both the X - pronunciation and the Y - pronunciation , fluctuating either randomly or ...
Seite 47
... morphemes , rather than to vowel segments of morphemes . Thus , in a properly formulated generative gram- mar of Nez Perce , each morpheme is to be assigned a mark for dominance , either in the lexicon ( in the case of lexical morphemes ) ...
... morphemes , rather than to vowel segments of morphemes . Thus , in a properly formulated generative gram- mar of Nez Perce , each morpheme is to be assigned a mark for dominance , either in the lexicon ( in the case of lexical morphemes ) ...
Seite 57
... Morphemes with * / i / , just like morphemes with * / a / and * / o / , do not have alternating forms ; thus we can readily see the association of these three types as ' fixed ' morphemes , vs. the * -u- and * -e - morphemes as ' alter ...
... Morphemes with * / i / , just like morphemes with * / a / and * / o / , do not have alternating forms ; thus we can readily see the association of these three types as ' fixed ' morphemes , vs. the * -u- and * -e - morphemes as ' alter ...
Inhalt
CONTENTS | 97 |
Notes 950 | 134 |
Publications received 952 | 230 |
Urheberrecht | |
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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