Language, Band 47,Ausgaben 3-4George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1971 |
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Seite 551
... considered together , since all are con- cerned with hypotheses as to what latent contrast there may be in certain grammatical variants . Thus the verb wet has two forms of both preterit and past participle : he wet ( ted ) , he has wet ...
... considered together , since all are con- cerned with hypotheses as to what latent contrast there may be in certain grammatical variants . Thus the verb wet has two forms of both preterit and past participle : he wet ( ted ) , he has wet ...
Seite 923
... ( considered by him a place - of - articulation feature ) and ' continuance ' . Since s and z are the only sibilant continuants in German and are opposed to each other by the single feature of voice , they are bilaterally opposed to each ...
... ( considered by him a place - of - articulation feature ) and ' continuance ' . Since s and z are the only sibilant continuants in German and are opposed to each other by the single feature of voice , they are bilaterally opposed to each ...
Seite 926
... considered privative . The tensing must then be considered an irrelevant side phenomenon , the degree of voicing of t being " zero " [ despite the fact that , physically , some phonation may actually take place during its production ] ...
... considered privative . The tensing must then be considered an irrelevant side phenomenon , the degree of voicing of t being " zero " [ despite the fact that , physically , some phonation may actually take place during its production ] ...
Inhalt
The phoneme revisited | 503 |
Semantic overloading a restudy of the verb remind | 522 |
Controlled activation of latent contrast | 548 |
Urheberrecht | |
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alternations analysis appear applied become century child Chomsky clause complete concerned considered consonants contains contrast course definition derived described dialects diminutive discussion distinctive English evidence example exist expression fact Figure final forms function German given grammar Halle important indicate interest involved John kind language later lexical linguistic marked meaning morpheme morphophonemic nasal nature noun object occur operation opposition original palatalized pattern phonemic phonological phrase position possible preceding present Press problem question realization reference relation relative remind representation root rules seems segments semantic sentence sequence shifts significant similar sound speakers speech stops stress structure suggest surface syllable symbol theory tion transformational underlying University verb voiced vowels