Language, Band 30 -Band 31,Ausgabe 4,Teil 3George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1955 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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Seite 50
... vowels brought about no change in its per- ception ; this is consistent with the result obtained for synthetic speech , that the frequency position of the bursts identified as [ t ] varied very little from vowel to vowel . The ...
... vowels brought about no change in its per- ception ; this is consistent with the result obtained for synthetic speech , that the frequency position of the bursts identified as [ t ] varied very little from vowel to vowel . The ...
Seite 444
... vowel extreme ( / i / or / u / ) after a non - extreme vowel assumes its consonantal shape . Another type includes iecur ' liver ' , uoluit ' it turns ' , uulpes ' fox ' , and adiiciō ' I add ' , in which the first vowel of the sequence ...
... vowel extreme ( / i / or / u / ) after a non - extreme vowel assumes its consonantal shape . Another type includes iecur ' liver ' , uoluit ' it turns ' , uulpes ' fox ' , and adiiciō ' I add ' , in which the first vowel of the sequence ...
Seite 506
... vowels phonemically analogous to no . 2 above . ' ( 4 ) There is no opposition between an oral vowel and a nasal vowel , be- cause the vowels which are regarded as nasal can be resolved into a vowel followed by the nasal consonantal ...
... vowels phonemically analogous to no . 2 above . ' ( 4 ) There is no opposition between an oral vowel and a nasal vowel , be- cause the vowels which are regarded as nasal can be resolved into a vowel followed by the nasal consonantal ...
Inhalt
I | 3 |
Lépoque réaliste I JUILLAND | 313 |
PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED | 339 |
Urheberrecht | |
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American analysis appears aspect Associate assume called chapter cited clauses College common comparative complete consonant contrast corresponding course derived dialects discussion distinction English evidence example existence explained expression fact final forms French function further future German give given grammar Greek historical imperfect important included indicative initial instance interest interpretation language later Latin Library linguistic listed material meaning Michigan morphemes names noun occurs original past pattern perfective person Ph.D phonemic phrase position possible present probably problems Professor Proto-Indo-European question reference relation represents result seems sound speech spirant statement stop stress structure subjunctive suffix suggests syllable tense theory tion University verb voiced vowel