Language, Band 16George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1940 |
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... syllable , the succeeding syllables having much weaker stress ( i.e. , in ordinary terminology , being ' unstressed ' ) . Such words may be of two or of three syllables ; mono- syllables which are not subordinated within the sentence to ...
... syllable , the succeeding syllables having much weaker stress ( i.e. , in ordinary terminology , being ' unstressed ' ) . Such words may be of two or of three syllables ; mono- syllables which are not subordinated within the sentence to ...
Seite 30
... syllable before or after the loud ( but not a final syllable ) has noticeably greater loudness than the other weak syllables . This secondary stress is especially noticeable when the syllable affected has a long vowel . Examples are ...
... syllable before or after the loud ( but not a final syllable ) has noticeably greater loudness than the other weak syllables . This secondary stress is especially noticeable when the syllable affected has a long vowel . Examples are ...
Seite 150
... syllables which precede an accented syllable are high in pitch with the sole exception of a word - initial open syllable containing a short vowel ; the latter type of syllable is low . Thus in the words alpatá ' alligator ' , hoktí ...
... syllables which precede an accented syllable are high in pitch with the sole exception of a word - initial open syllable containing a short vowel ; the latter type of syllable is low . Thus in the words alpatá ' alligator ' , hoktí ...
Inhalt
A Note on Vowel Length in American Speech | 33 |
Analogical Weak Preterite Forms | 48 |
HOCKETT R G KENT U T HOLMES JR G | 54 |
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ablaut adjective Akkadian alphabetic American BERNARD BLOCH Burushaski century coisig consonant dative-object declension derived dialect dictionary distinction double writing E. A. SPEISER element enclitic evidence examples Gaul Gaulish genitive German Goth Grammar Greek Gypsy HANS KURATH Hartford Conn higher high-front Hittite Hurrian indicate Indo-European Indo-Hittite inflected JAOS language laryngeal Latin linguistic LINGUISTIC SOCIETY London Engl mahogany meaning Mitanni morphophonemic Muskogee nominative nouns occurs origin orthography perfect person phonemic phonology plural position present preterite pronoun Ras Shamra root Russian Sanskrit Sapir seems semantic Semitic sentence Serving through 1940 Sharon Conn Slavic Slavic languages SOCIETY OF AMERICA sound speech Speiser spirant stem stops stress STURTEVANT suffix Swietenia syllable syntactical taxemes tense texts tion tonal accent Univ University verb verbal voiced voiceless vowel word