Language, Band 70,Ausgaben 3-4George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1994 |
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... spoken languages ' ( 15 ) . He remarks that ' the last few years have seen ... an exaggeration of the commonalities of the two sorts of system [ s ] —a burst of activity [ by linguists ] arguing that in their " phonological " structure ...
... spoken languages ' ( 15 ) . He remarks that ' the last few years have seen ... an exaggeration of the commonalities of the two sorts of system [ s ] —a burst of activity [ by linguists ] arguing that in their " phonological " structure ...
Seite 603
George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch. have insisted that only spoken language is lan- guage proper , and that written language is noth- ing but a representation of spoken language . But , paradoxically , when looking at the kind of ...
George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch. have insisted that only spoken language is lan- guage proper , and that written language is noth- ing but a representation of spoken language . But , paradoxically , when looking at the kind of ...
Seite 643
... spoken data here , thus increasing the number of speakers for whom data can be cited and the number of instances which can be tallied for a given speaker . Freely spoken data have traditionally and for good reason been given more weight ...
... spoken data here , thus increasing the number of speakers for whom data can be cited and the number of instances which can be tallied for a given speaker . Freely spoken data have traditionally and for good reason been given more weight ...
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