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Seite 96
Unmarked ini- tial and final syllables belong to pitch phoneme / 4 / ; unmarked medial syllables belong to pitch ... When two or more syllables in succession have pitch / 2 / , the last syllable in the sequence is louder than the rest .
Unmarked ini- tial and final syllables belong to pitch phoneme / 4 / ; unmarked medial syllables belong to pitch ... When two or more syllables in succession have pitch / 2 / , the last syllable in the sequence is louder than the rest .
Seite 118
Nevertheless , it is useful to state the correlation between phonetic syllables and phoneme sequences . Each of the following single phonemes and phoneme se- quences constitutes one phonetic syllable : Group 1 : / i , e , a , o , u , ñ ...
Nevertheless , it is useful to state the correlation between phonetic syllables and phoneme sequences . Each of the following single phonemes and phoneme se- quences constitutes one phonetic syllable : Group 1 : / i , e , a , o , u , ñ ...
Seite 351
The first of these is TRILITERALISM : ' Every Sino - Japanese syllable is rendered with three letters of the alphabet . ... Since the Chinese elements vary from a single phoneme such as a to four phonemes ( two syllables ) such as koku ...
The first of these is TRILITERALISM : ' Every Sino - Japanese syllable is rendered with three letters of the alphabet . ... Since the Chinese elements vary from a single phoneme such as a to four phonemes ( two syllables ) such as koku ...
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Inhalt
The Comparison of Inequality in Spanish | 28 |
Peiping Morphophonemics | 63 |
Studies in Colloquial Japanese IV Phonemics | 86 |
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action actor adjective adverb alternants American analysis appears become borrowing called College common comparative complete consonant construction containing contrast course definite dialect discussion distribution element English evidence examples expression fact final forms French function German give given Hall important included indicated initial instances Institute language Latin Library linguistic más material matter meaning Michigan morphemes names nasalized noted noun object occur origin parallel pattern Ph.D phonemes phrase position possible preceding present problem Professor recorded reference represent Romance seems short similar Society sound speaker speech statement stem stress structure substitution suffix syllable texts tion tone University usually verb vowel word written York