Language, Band 10George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1934 |
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Seite 319
... explained as transferred analogically from associated words or forms in which the conditions for the development of the h are met , while at other times we may doubt the correctness of such phonetic transcriptions when they are not ...
... explained as transferred analogically from associated words or forms in which the conditions for the development of the h are met , while at other times we may doubt the correctness of such phonetic transcriptions when they are not ...
Seite 382
... explaining , as the Latin words have long vowels . Evidently these forms were constructed , in the way explained above , from plurals having u and i . §54 . Italian fiera can be explained as being similar to pioppo for * poppio ...
... explaining , as the Latin words have long vowels . Evidently these forms were constructed , in the way explained above , from plurals having u and i . §54 . Italian fiera can be explained as being similar to pioppo for * poppio ...
Seite 384
... explained nowhere in the book , and sebbellire ( §87 ) , which has bb < p and ll < I needing explanation . The index lists words that are not in the body of the book , such as mo 20 and no 20 . Looking back to §20 we find that mo and no ...
... explained nowhere in the book , and sebbellire ( §87 ) , which has bb < p and ll < I needing explanation . The index lists words that are not in the body of the book , such as mo 20 and no 20 . Looking back to §20 we find that mo and no ...
Inhalt
R WHITNEY TUCKER Linguistic Substrata in Pennsylvania | 1 |
E H STURTEVANT The Development of Prehistoric Latin Accented | 6 |
ALBERT MOREY STURTEVANT Certain Phonetic Tendencies | 17 |
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ablaut accent adjectives Alcaeus analogy Beow Bloomfield Brut Chicago Chitimacha Cilentan cniht College consonant dialect digamma diphthong E. H. Sturtevant EDWARD SAPIR English etymology examples explained final FM Prof French German glottal gomen Goth Grammar Greek heavy syllable heom heore Hitt Hittite Hittite Language Indo-European Indo-Hittite initial Jespersen Kent king language laryngal stop later Latin Lazamon Library light syllable Linguistic Linguistic Society meaning muchel nasal noun occurs Ohio Ohio State University original palatal passage Philadelphia phonemic phrase plural poetry position preceding pretonic Professor pronounced pronunciation Roland G Sanskrit Sapir schwa seems Semitic sense Sievers's law sing Society of America sound spirant stem subjunctive suffix swide symbols tion transcription Univ Vedic verb verse voiced voiceless vowel Wackernagel weoren word Yale University York City þat