Language, Bände 16-17George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1940 |
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Seite 38
... stop . It seems impossible to conclude that the releasing movements of a voiced stop favor the earlier beginning of the vowel . On the other hand , of course , there is in English after a voiceless stop what is usually called an ...
... stop . It seems impossible to conclude that the releasing movements of a voiced stop favor the earlier beginning of the vowel . On the other hand , of course , there is in English after a voiceless stop what is usually called an ...
Seite 39
... stop were the cause of the differences observed between forms with voiced versus forms with voiceless initial stop , we should find this difference to be about .02 second in favor of the vowel after a voiced release . It is clear from ...
... stop were the cause of the differences observed between forms with voiced versus forms with voiceless initial stop , we should find this difference to be about .02 second in favor of the vowel after a voiced release . It is clear from ...
Seite 43
... stop is longer than the vowel after a voiceless stop , the total syllable move- ment is either about the same , or only slightly longer after the voiceless stop . Likewise , in those cases in which the vowel after the voiceless stop is ...
... stop is longer than the vowel after a voiceless stop , the total syllable move- ment is either about the same , or only slightly longer after the voiceless stop . Likewise , in those cases in which the vowel after the voiceless stop is ...
Inhalt
The Enclitic Emphasizing Pronoun of the Third | 12 |
SerboCroatian Accents and Quantities | 29 |
Analogical Weak Preterite Forms | 48 |
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3d sg ablaut accent adjective allophones American appears aspirate BERNARD BLOCH Canaanite cited compound Conn consonant contrast Cree declension derived dialects dictionary diphthong distinction element ending Engl English etymology evidence examples fact final French Gaul genitive German Goth Grammar Greek Hitt Hittite Hurrian indicate Indo-European Indo-Hittite initial Intonation Italian language laryngeal later Latin LEONARD BLOOMFIELD linguistic Linguistic Society Lith long vowel mahogany meaning Menomini Muskogee neuter nouns occurs Ojibwa original pattern perfect person phonemic phonology plural position prefix present preterite probably pronoun pronunciation Quintilian reference result root seems semantic semivowel sentence singular sound speakers speech spirant stem stop stress Sturtevant suffix syllable syntactic texts tion Tosk Ugaritic University variant velar verb verbal visarga voiced voiceless WGmc words writing