Language, Band 83,Ausgaben 1-2George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 2007 |
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Seite 166
... vowel features , are given descriptions in terms of an articulatory synthesizer that will correctly produce the re- quired sounds , somewhat as in the articulatory - phonology model proposed by Browman and Goldstein ( 1992 , inter alia ) ...
... vowel features , are given descriptions in terms of an articulatory synthesizer that will correctly produce the re- quired sounds , somewhat as in the articulatory - phonology model proposed by Browman and Goldstein ( 1992 , inter alia ) ...
Seite 167
... vowels . McAllister and colleagues ( 1974 ) note that the offglide for [ y ] is the protruded semi- vowel [ q ] , whereas [ u ] has a [ ẞ ] offglide . The Japanese high back vowel [ u ] , as in mu ' nothing ' , is another example of a vowel ...
... vowels . McAllister and colleagues ( 1974 ) note that the offglide for [ y ] is the protruded semi- vowel [ q ] , whereas [ u ] has a [ ẞ ] offglide . The Japanese high back vowel [ u ] , as in mu ' nothing ' , is another example of a vowel ...
Seite 391
... vowel inventory and consonant inventory are both correlated with population size is quite remarkable . This is especially so because consonant inventory and vowel inventory do not correlate with one another at all in this data set ( rho ...
... vowel inventory and consonant inventory are both correlated with population size is quite remarkable . This is especially so because consonant inventory and vowel inventory do not correlate with one another at all in this data set ( rho ...
Inhalt
HanZangyu tonyuanci yanjiu vol 1 HanZangyu | 1 |
Paying tribute Brian D Joseph | 5 |
Free prefix ordering in Chintang Balthasar Bickel Goma Banjade Martin Gaenszle | 43 |
Urheberrecht | |
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acceptability analysis appear approach argues argument associated assume authors Cambridge chapter claims clauses clusters complex condition consider constraint constructions contrast demonstrative described dialect discourse discussion distinction distribution effect embedding English evidence example experiment fact focus forms frequency function further give given grammar Greek important indicates inflectional instance interaction interesting interpretation involved islands issue John language less lexical linguistic marking meaning morphology nature Note object pattern person Peter phonetic phonological pitch accent plural position possible prediction prefixes present Press processing pronominals provides questions reference relative clauses resumption semantic sentences significant similar single sounds speakers specific speech split stem strategy structure subjects suggests suppletion syntactic Table tense theory tion University values verb volume vowel