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1 always true that the beginning of the scope of a pitch - morpheme similarly coincides with the beginning of a constituent ( or of the utterance ) . If , in our orthography , we marked a parenthetical expression by placing a closing ...
1 always true that the beginning of the scope of a pitch - morpheme similarly coincides with the beginning of a constituent ( or of the utterance ) . If , in our orthography , we marked a parenthetical expression by placing a closing ...
Seite 153
A lexical stress becomes considerably reduced in intensity if it does not occur as the beginning point of a primary contour . In the sentence The ' gentleman de'sires a ' ticket but not a reser'vation 32-3 3- ° 2- 3- ° 2-4 // lexical ...
A lexical stress becomes considerably reduced in intensity if it does not occur as the beginning point of a primary contour . In the sentence The ' gentleman de'sires a ' ticket but not a reser'vation 32-3 3- ° 2- 3- ° 2-4 // lexical ...
Seite 260
If he can , numerals for the primary contours are placed as closely as possible under the beginning , ending , and direction - change points ( unfortunately , however , three numerals cannot be placed under a single vowel when all three ...
If he can , numerals for the primary contours are placed as closely as possible under the beginning , ending , and direction - change points ( unfortunately , however , three numerals cannot be placed under a single vowel when all three ...
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Inhalt
Personal Pronouns in Reflexive Situations | 23 |
The Phonemic Split of Germanic k in Old English | 34 |
NonInitial k in the North of England | 43 |
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affix alternant American analysis appears assume base beginning belongs Bois called College common comparative complete consider consonant constituent construction contains contour contrast dialect diphthongs discussion distinction element England English evidence example fact final forms further Germanic give given grammar Greek Hall hand Hittite indicate Indo-European initial Institute Italy king language laryngeal later Latin Library linguistic meaning Michigan morpheme morphs names noted noun occur original pattern perhaps person Ph.D phonemic position possible preceding prefix present probably problem Professor pronoun publication result root seems sentence sequence single Society sound speech stem stop stress suffix syllable tion tone unit University utterance verb voiced vowel words York zero