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which also have no underlying tone . But these are different from the nonlexical words : they must suRFACE with a High tone . Some receive a High by PostStem or the compound rule ; the rest acquire an initial High tone by what we term ...
which also have no underlying tone . But these are different from the nonlexical words : they must suRFACE with a High tone . Some receive a High by PostStem or the compound rule ; the rest acquire an initial High tone by what we term ...
Seite 244
Tone Absorption 10. STRESS . Up to now we have shown that from the lexicon through the post - lexical rules governing intonation , tonal contours in Serbo - Croatian can be represented and derived solely in terms of phonological tone .
Tone Absorption 10. STRESS . Up to now we have shown that from the lexicon through the post - lexical rules governing intonation , tonal contours in Serbo - Croatian can be represented and derived solely in terms of phonological tone .
Seite 308
There is sufficient evidence ( from Chen 1986 , Cheng 1973 ) that the single most important principle governing the applicability of tone sandhi in this language is that a major phrase boundary blocks the immediately preceding tone from ...
There is sufficient evidence ( from Chen 1986 , Cheng 1973 ) that the single most important principle governing the applicability of tone sandhi in this language is that a major phrase boundary blocks the immediately preceding tone from ...
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Inhalt
Publications received | 446 |
Word formation in a modular theory | 451 |
Lexical and syntactic causatives | 485 |
Urheberrecht | |
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analysis appear apply approach argues argument assigned associated Cambridge causative claim clause communication compared compounds consider construction contains context contrast derived dialects discourse discussion distinction effect elements English evidence example expression fact FIGURE final formation function give given grammar head historical important initial interpretation involves John language lexical linguistic marked meaning morphological nature notes notion noun object occur particular patterns person phonological phrase position possible predict present Press preverbs principles problem produced pronoun properties proposed question receive reference relational relative represented result role rule semantic sentences similar speakers speech spoken stress structure suggests syllable syntactic syntax theory tone types union University verb volume vowel word writing written