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THE PHONEMIC SPLIT OF GERMANIC k IN OLD ENGLISH HERBERT PENZL UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS [ Two allophones of Germanic k became separate phonemes after the i - umlaut had changed the distribution of palatal vowels in Proto - Old - English .
THE PHONEMIC SPLIT OF GERMANIC k IN OLD ENGLISH HERBERT PENZL UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS [ Two allophones of Germanic k became separate phonemes after the i - umlaut had changed the distribution of palatal vowels in Proto - Old - English .
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significant ( 99f , 100i ) , and yet non - phonemic contrasts between normal utterance ( whispered and aloud ) , falsetto , breathed speech , and song . " ( 4 ) Pike devotes several pages to quantity ( length ) .
significant ( 99f , 100i ) , and yet non - phonemic contrasts between normal utterance ( whispered and aloud ) , falsetto , breathed speech , and song . " ( 4 ) Pike devotes several pages to quantity ( length ) .
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perfectly alike to native speakers of the language to which they belong , their purely phonemic transcription is identical , even if they differ in grammar or lexicon . The rationale of this stipulation is clear .
perfectly alike to native speakers of the language to which they belong , their purely phonemic transcription is identical , even if they differ in grammar or lexicon . The rationale of this stipulation is clear .
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affix alternant American analysis appears assume base beginning belongs Bois called College common Compare 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 reason 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