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The assignment of tone is basically dependent on the number of syllables in the word and the placement of stress ... who set up the rule : ' When a dissyllabic Accent II word is contracted to one syllable , it retains Accent II .
The assignment of tone is basically dependent on the number of syllables in the word and the placement of stress ... who set up the rule : ' When a dissyllabic Accent II word is contracted to one syllable , it retains Accent II .
Seite 247
Tonic words have a fall of pitch on some syllable before the last , with a high pitch on all syllables through the ' accented ' one ( I follow Bloch 1946 , fn . 4 , in writing an acute accent mark over the vowel of this syllable ) ...
Tonic words have a fall of pitch on some syllable before the last , with a high pitch on all syllables through the ' accented ' one ( I follow Bloch 1946 , fn . 4 , in writing an acute accent mark over the vowel of this syllable ) ...
Seite 248
Often it is the LOWNESS of the post - accentual syllables that provide the best cue for hearing the position of the accent ... And when a syllable is voiceless , as happens when the high vowels i and u are automatically devoiced between ...
Often it is the LOWNESS of the post - accentual syllables that provide the best cue for hearing the position of the accent ... And when a syllable is voiceless , as happens when the high vowels i and u are automatically devoiced between ...
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Inhalt
The distributional identification of Finnish morphophonemes | 20 |
Negations in Pāṇinian rules | 34 |
Language as symbolization | 57 |
Urheberrecht | |
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accent actually alternation analysis appear apply assume base become completely condition considered consonant Consonantal constructions contains contrast corresponding course derived dialects dictionary discussion distinct distribution elements English environment evidence example fact final formal forms function further Germanic give given grammar indicate initial interpretation involved kind language later linguistic marked matrices meaning morpheme morphophone names natural nouns occur operation original phonemic phonological position possible preceding present Press principle problem question reason redundancy reference represent representations require responses result rules seems segment semantic sentences sequence single sound specified speech statement stress structure structure rules suffix suggested syllable symbol systematic phonemic Table theory tion tone underlying units University values verb voiced vowel written