Language, Band 34George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1958 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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... indicate word boundaries; they relate to contours as follows: forms with final stress and stressed monosyllables are indicated by acute accent marks; unstressed monosyllables and nonsyllabic words are automatically absorbed into the ...
... indicate word boundaries; they relate to contours as follows: forms with final stress and stressed monosyllables are indicated by acute accent marks; unstressed monosyllables and nonsyllabic words are automatically absorbed into the ...
Seite 2
... indicate word boundaries ; they relate to contours as follows : forms with final stress and stressed monosyllables are indicated by acute accent marks ; unstressed monosyllables and nonsyllabic words are automatically ab- sorbed into ...
... indicate word boundaries ; they relate to contours as follows : forms with final stress and stressed monosyllables are indicated by acute accent marks ; unstressed monosyllables and nonsyllabic words are automatically ab- sorbed into ...
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... indicated by morphophonemic symbols in the listing of the morphemes which are affected by them ; ( 3 ) recurrent morpheme alternations dependent on the morphemic environment , indicated by a decimal numeral in the morphological index ...
... indicated by morphophonemic symbols in the listing of the morphemes which are affected by them ; ( 3 ) recurrent morpheme alternations dependent on the morphemic environment , indicated by a decimal numeral in the morphological index ...
Inhalt
NOTES | 335 |
III | 341 |
PreIndoHittite uw um A suggested restatement | 345 |
Urheberrecht | |
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accent allophones American analysis appear Associate assume called chapter clear clusters College comparative considered consists consonant contain contexts contrast derivative dialect discussion distinction distribution earlier ending English evidence examples explanation fact final forms function German give given grammar Greek historical important included indicated Indo-European initial Institute interest Italy language later Latin least Library linguistic marked material meaning Michigan morpheme names nominative noun object occur original pattern person Ph.D phonemes plural position possible present probably problem Professor Proto-Indo-European question reason reference relation releases represent seems short similar sound speech statement stem stops stress structure suffix suggests syllable symbols tion University verb voiced vowel writing