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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... syllables respectively : one could speak here of the second syllable ( which is always -e- followed by a nasal or liquid / 1n r / ) as ' facultative ' or ' quasisyllabic ' . Their syllabicity is historically more recent than that of ...
... syllables respectively : one could speak here of the second syllable ( which is always -e- followed by a nasal or liquid / 1n r / ) as ' facultative ' or ' quasisyllabic ' . Their syllabicity is historically more recent than that of ...
Seite 247
... syllable ) , except that an unaccented first syllable is pronounced somewhat lower , though not so low as the syllables after the accent . Thus there is always a difference of pitch between the first two syllables after a juncture ...
... syllable ) , except that an unaccented first syllable is pronounced somewhat lower , though not so low as the syllables after the accent . Thus there is always a difference of pitch between the first two syllables after a juncture ...
Seite 248
... syllable is voiceless , as happens when the high vowels i and u are automatically devoiced between voiceless consonants , the accent does not always flee to an adjacent syllable ( typically the following one ) but sometimes can be heard ...
... syllable is voiceless , as happens when the high vowels i and u are automatically devoiced between voiceless consonants , the accent does not always flee to an adjacent syllable ( typically the following one ) but sometimes can be heard ...
Inhalt
The distributional identification of Finnish morphophonemes | 20 |
Negations in Pāņinian rules | 34 |
Language as symbolization | 57 |
Urheberrecht | |
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accent adjectives allomorphs allophones alternation analysis aorist apocope apply base basic behavior Bernard Bloch Chomsky compound condition considered consonant consonantal context contrast corresponding derived dialects dictionary diphthong discussion distinction English environment evidence example fact feature values final formal forms geminate German given grammar interpretation Japanese Katz language language isolates lexeme lexical units linguistic matrices meaning morpheme morphophone Mouton N₁ naming units nasal nouns occur Ojibwa Old Low Franconian Ōno pair pattern phonemic phonological plural position possible preceding present principle problem pronoun question redundancy reference representation result root segment structure rules semantic semological units sentences sequence sonorant sound speakers specific speech stem stress suffix syllable symbolization syntactic systematic phonemic tense theory tion tone tonemic underlying underlying representation University variant verb Verner's Law vocalic voiced voiceless vowel vowel shift words