Language, Band 83George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 2007 |
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Seite 286
... consonant clusters ( except for some stop - glide clusters created by optional syncope ; see §8.2 ) . Tagalog has many loans from Spanish and English that do begin with clusters , however , and these words may be infixed . Two main ...
... consonant clusters ( except for some stop - glide clusters created by optional syncope ; see §8.2 ) . Tagalog has many loans from Spanish and English that do begin with clusters , however , and these words may be infixed . Two main ...
Seite 306
... consonant articulations . If two adjacent consonants are pronounced with a gap in between - that is , the first consonant's closure is released before the next consonant's closure begins , so that there is a short interval in which the ...
... consonant articulations . If two adjacent consonants are pronounced with a gap in between - that is , the first consonant's closure is released before the next consonant's closure begins , so that there is a short interval in which the ...
Seite 388
... consonant inventory as well . Since not all of the original materials were still readily available , it proved difficult to collect all the relevant data here , and we were not able to collect information on consonants for as many ...
... consonant inventory as well . Since not all of the original materials were still readily available , it proved difficult to collect all the relevant data here , and we were not able to collect information on consonants for as many ...
Inhalt
Languages and prehistory of central Siberia | 452 |
Linguistics today Facing a greater challenge | 464 |
K Chirkova | 471 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accent alliteration analysis appear approach argue argument authors borrowing Cambridge chapter City clause clusters complex consider consonant constraint constructions context contrast correlation demonstrative described dialect diffusion discourse discussion distinction effects English equative evidence example expected experiment explain expressions fact Figure final focus frequency functional given grammar important infixation interpretation inventory involve issue John language learning less lexical linguistic marked meaning natural occur pairs pattern perception phonetic phonological pitch pitch accent population position possible predicted present Press production properties proposed provides question reference semantic sentence short-a significant similar social speakers speech split stress structure suggests syllable syntactic Tagalog tense theory tion transfer University variable variation verb volume vowel York