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Joan B. HOOPER University of California , Los Angeles The syllable is an important phonological unit that must be formally defined within generative phonology . Evidence from Spanish , German , and other languages shows that a syllable ...
Joan B. HOOPER University of California , Los Angeles The syllable is an important phonological unit that must be formally defined within generative phonology . Evidence from Spanish , German , and other languages shows that a syllable ...
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The above facts alone are justification enough for recognizing the syllable as a phonological unit , but there is more : a variety of languages have phonological processes that are dependent upon syllable structure .
The above facts alone are justification enough for recognizing the syllable as a phonological unit , but there is more : a variety of languages have phonological processes that are dependent upon syllable structure .
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а It would be possible , however , to postulate underlying syllables , marked off by syllable boundaries in the lexicon . The one advantage to this system is that the marking conventions and morpheme - structure conditions could refer ...
а It would be possible , however , to postulate underlying syllables , marked off by syllable boundaries in the lexicon . The one advantage to this system is that the marking conventions and morpheme - structure conditions could refer ...
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Inhalt
Hayward Keniston 18831970 obituary by Robert A Hall Jr | 249 |
Semantic axiom number one | 256 |
Converging theories in linguistics | 266 |
Urheberrecht | |
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accent alternative analysis appears apply argument assignment assume becomes boundaries called Chinook claim clause clear comparative considered consonant constituent constructions contains course deletion derivation dialects diphthongization discussion distinctive elements English evidence examples existence explain fact Figure final function further German give given global grammar hypothesis implies important indicate interesting interpretation involved Jargon John kind language latter least lexical linguistic marked markedness meaning nature normal noted noun object observed occur original phonetic phonological phrase position possible preceding predicate present Press primary principle problem pronominal proposal question reason reference relations relative respect result rule seems segments semantic sentences speakers specific speech stem stress structure suggests surface syllable syntactic theory tion transformational underlying University verb vowel