Language, Band 70,Ausgaben 3-4George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1994 |
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Seite 426
... initial allo- phones , when produced by some speakers or in some prosodic contexts , resemble intervocalic ... initial [ + voice ] stops resemble utterance - initial ones . Caisse 1982 and Docherty 1989 present evidence that both ...
... initial allo- phones , when produced by some speakers or in some prosodic contexts , resemble intervocalic ... initial [ + voice ] stops resemble utterance - initial ones . Caisse 1982 and Docherty 1989 present evidence that both ...
Seite 429
... initial closures entirely because of the lesser Ug needed to maintain than to initiate voicing . Initial [ + voice ] allo- phones would most often be voiceless unaspirated , as an accidental conse- quence of not expanding the oral ...
... initial closures entirely because of the lesser Ug needed to maintain than to initiate voicing . Initial [ + voice ] allo- phones would most often be voiceless unaspirated , as an accidental conse- quence of not expanding the oral ...
Seite 430
... initial [ + voice ] stop . This interpretation is supported by Lindqvist's obser- vation of glottal closure before speech began even in some tokens where the initial segment was [ -voice ] , which would require opening the glottis after ...
... initial [ + voice ] stop . This interpretation is supported by Lindqvist's obser- vation of glottal closure before speech began even in some tokens where the initial segment was [ -voice ] , which would require opening the glottis after ...
Inhalt
JOURNAL OF THE LINGUISTIC | 417 |
Phonetic knowledge John Kingston Randy L Diehl | 419 |
The women Foundation Members of | 455 |
Urheberrecht | |
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affixes American analysis annual appear approach argues argument associated Cambridge chapter claim clauses combining communities constructions context contrast determiner discussion distinct Embo English evidence example expressions fact forms function Gaelic gender German gerund given grammar head idiomatic idioms individual inflection inflection class initial instances Institute interest internal interpretation involved kind language less lexical linguistic marked meaning meeting morphology nature noted nouns object occur particular passive patterns person personal-pattern phonetic phonological phrase plural position possible predicate present Press Principle produced pronoun properties question reference relative roots rules Salish semantic sentences social Society sources speakers speech spoken stops structure suggest syntactic syntax Table theory tion traditional University variable variant variation verb voice volume vowel women York