Language, Band 43George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1968 Proceedings of the annual meeting of the Society in v. 1-11, 1925-34. After 1934 they appear in Its Bulletin. |
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... rules , where it must , moreover , follow rules such as ( 8 ) . It seems that examples such as the above two show that the segment structure rules must appear in the P rules , and thus that they cannot be put in the MS rules . There is ...
... rules , where it must , moreover , follow rules such as ( 8 ) . It seems that examples such as the above two show that the segment structure rules must appear in the P rules , and thus that they cannot be put in the MS rules . There is ...
Seite 406
... rules as an ordered set . Rule B follows rule A in this ordering just in case B refers to feature values inserted by A ; in particular , this means that all segment structure rules follow all sequence structure rules . However , since MS ...
... rules as an ordered set . Rule B follows rule A in this ordering just in case B refers to feature values inserted by A ; in particular , this means that all segment structure rules follow all sequence structure rules . However , since MS ...
Seite 407
... rules are ordered and had the insertion rule as the first rule , for otherwise the other MS rules could not make use of the legitimate generalization that no consonant clusters occur . But we saw reason in §2.2 to require that the MS ...
... rules are ordered and had the insertion rule as the first rule , for otherwise the other MS rules could not make use of the legitimate generalization that no consonant clusters occur . But we saw reason in §2.2 to require that the MS ...
Inhalt
The distributional identification of Finnish morphophonemes | 20 |
Negations in Pāņinian rules | 34 |
Language as symbolization | 57 |
Urheberrecht | |
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accent actually alternation analysis appear apply assume base basic become behavior called communication comparative complete condition considered consonant contains contrast corresponding course derived dialects dictionary discussion distinction ending English evidence example fact final formal forms function further German give given grammar historical important indicate initial interesting interpretation kind language later lexical linguistic marked matrices meaning morpheme morphophone naming natural nouns occur operation original pair particular pattern phonemic phonological position possible preceding present Press principle problem question reason reference represent require respect result root rules seems segment semantic sentences separate sequence single sound speakers specific speech statement stress structure suffix suggested syllable symbolization Table theory tion tone units University verb voiced vowel