Language, Band 33George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1957 Proceedings of the annual meeting of the Society in v. 1-11, 1925-34. After 1934 they appear in Its Bulletin. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 72
Seite 31
... syllable in which this change happens to occur , or in the degree of weakening . ) On the basis of this general pattern , it occurred to us that we might find voiceless vowels at the end of some words which were similarly affected ...
... syllable in which this change happens to occur , or in the degree of weakening . ) On the basis of this general pattern , it occurred to us that we might find voiceless vowels at the end of some words which were similarly affected ...
Seite 124
... syllable of heavier stress than the others . When the word is used in a sentence , usually the same syllable is stressed or the word has no stressed syllable at all ; rarely the stress is shifted , i.e. falls on a syllable other than ...
... syllable of heavier stress than the others . When the word is used in a sentence , usually the same syllable is stressed or the word has no stressed syllable at all ; rarely the stress is shifted , i.e. falls on a syllable other than ...
Seite 125
... syllable ' means in effect that the word X has two alternants , one with stress on the third syllable , one with no stress at all . If the word occurs with the stress on any other syllable , this indicates the presence of an additional ...
... syllable ' means in effect that the word X has two alternants , one with stress on the third syllable , one with no stress at all . If the word occurs with the stress on any other syllable , this indicates the presence of an additional ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
acoustic Akkadian allomorphs allophones American analysis appear Assistant Professor Associate Professor Bernard Bloch Calif co-occurrence College consonants construction contrast derived descriptive linguistics dialect diphthongs discussion distinction distribution elements example fact forms French genitive German Gothic grammar Greek Hittite indicate Indo-European Indo-European languages Indo-Hittite Jakobson language laryngeal Latin lexical Linguistic Society Luwian meaning modern morpheme n-tuples N₁ N₂ names neogrammarian nominal noun occur passé pattern Persian Ph.D phonemes phonology plural position possible preceding present pro-morpheme problem Professor of English pronoun Proto-Germanic question reference relation Sanskrit semantic semivowel sentence sequence Slavic sonants sound speakers speech statement stem stress structure Sturtevant suffix syllable tense texts theory Thracian tion transformations UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES V₁ variant verb vocalic vowel words writing zero Zipf's Law