Language, Band 61,Ausgaben 1-2George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1985 |
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Seite 259
... stress , which yield two degrees , assign secondary stress to pretonic syllables and no stress to posttonic syllables . From this follows the relationship pretonic post- tonic - which means that , in a given style , any reductive ...
... stress , which yield two degrees , assign secondary stress to pretonic syllables and no stress to posttonic syllables . From this follows the relationship pretonic post- tonic - which means that , in a given style , any reductive ...
Seite 280
... stress patterns of Figs . 10-12 , which assign secondary stress to all pretonic syllables . There is also a slight tendency for stress to shift to alternating patterns in a sentence . Thus , although você ' you ' is normally pronounced ...
... stress patterns of Figs . 10-12 , which assign secondary stress to all pretonic syllables . There is also a slight tendency for stress to shift to alternating patterns in a sentence . Thus , although você ' you ' is normally pronounced ...
Seite 281
... stress are proposed : the tonic syllable carries primary stress , pretonic syllables carry secondary stress , and posttonic syllables carry no stress . This conclusion is supported by instrumental data on durations , which show that ...
... stress are proposed : the tonic syllable carries primary stress , pretonic syllables carry secondary stress , and posttonic syllables carry no stress . This conclusion is supported by instrumental data on durations , which show that ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accent affixes analysis appear approach argument aspect Chap Chinese claim clause clitics communication complement consider constituent constructions contains context contrast definite dialect direct discourse discussion distinction element English evidence examples expressed fact FIGURE final function give given grammar important indicate interesting interpretation involve John language lexical linguistic logical major marked meaning metalinguistic natural negation negative Note nouns object occur operator particles particular passive patterns person phonological phrase position possible pragmatic present Press principles problem question reading reference relation relative rules semantic sentences similar speakers speech stress structure suggests syllable syntactic syntax Table theory topic true types University utterance varieties verb words written York