Language, Bände 31-36George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1961 Proceedings of the annual meeting of the Society in v. 1-11, 1925-34. After 1934 they appear in Its Bulletin. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 91
Seite 41
... final ( i.e. prejunctural ) position , instances of non - final contrasts between vowel and semivowel are much less common , and this fact may be one of the causes of the delay in recognition of the phonemic status of the semivowels ...
... final ( i.e. prejunctural ) position , instances of non - final contrasts between vowel and semivowel are much less common , and this fact may be one of the causes of the delay in recognition of the phonemic status of the semivowels ...
Seite 191
... final position , or ( b ) t > d everywhere except in syllable - final position . Hoenigswald chooses inference ( b ) for Gothic , inference ( a ) for German . The completely parallel data provide no basis for these opposite choices ...
... final position , or ( b ) t > d everywhere except in syllable - final position . Hoenigswald chooses inference ( b ) for Gothic , inference ( a ) for German . The completely parallel data provide no basis for these opposite choices ...
Seite 314
... final or , as is true of the lastmentioned , a tendentially radical - final cluster [ ks ] , this cluster , through a normal sound shift in Old Spanish , yielded ground to a simple consonant , namely [ S ] , thus buttressing the new ...
... final or , as is true of the lastmentioned , a tendentially radical - final cluster [ ks ] , this cluster , through a normal sound shift in Old Spanish , yielded ground to a simple consonant , namely [ S ] , thus buttressing the new ...
Inhalt
Notes | 476 |
Gothic iddja and Old English ĕode | 483 |
Greek kámnō and támnō | 502 |
6 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
American analysis appears Assistant Professor Associate become Calif called clause College common comparative consonant contrast course Department dialects discussion distinction English evidence example fact final forms further German give given grammar Greek important indicate Institute interest Italy Japan language later Latin least less Library linguistic material meaning Member method Michigan names nasal noun occur original pattern Ph.D phonemes phonological phrase position possible present preterite probably problem Professor Proto-Indo-European question reason recorded reference relation represent Research result School seems sentence separate similar Society sound Spanish speech spelling statement stops stress string structure suggested syllable tagmeme tion translation University verb vido vowel York