Language, Band 10George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1934 |
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Seite 348
... short out of context and remains short in the phrase final position in context , otherwise it is long . 2. Polysyllabic words ending in a short vowel preceded by ? in turn preceded by a vowel , have this form out of context and in the ...
... short out of context and remains short in the phrase final position in context , otherwise it is long . 2. Polysyllabic words ending in a short vowel preceded by ? in turn preceded by a vowel , have this form out of context and in the ...
Seite 378
... short i depends on the final vowel ; if the final vowel was u or is now i , Latin open i has become close i , presumably thru close e . Latin short i was open and it has not gener- ally remained in Romanic ; it changed directly to close ...
... short i depends on the final vowel ; if the final vowel was u or is now i , Latin open i has become close i , presumably thru close e . Latin short i was open and it has not gener- ally remained in Romanic ; it changed directly to close ...
Seite 380
... short o back to long o under the influence of the plural , whereas popular speech kept short o in the singular and extended it to the plural . §24 . The author assumes a short u in pulicem to explain póletše . This is evidently wrong ...
... short o back to long o under the influence of the plural , whereas popular speech kept short o in the singular and extended it to the plural . §24 . The author assumes a short u in pulicem to explain póletše . This is evidently wrong ...
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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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
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