Language, Band 74,Ausgaben 3-4George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1998 |
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Seite 528
... vowel reduction and loss without regular adjacent tonic lengthening . Partial vowel - to - vowel coarticulation with or without pe- ripheral vowel reduction is commonly phonologized as umlaut . Examples of extreme coarticulation ...
... vowel reduction and loss without regular adjacent tonic lengthening . Partial vowel - to - vowel coarticulation with or without pe- ripheral vowel reduction is commonly phonologized as umlaut . Examples of extreme coarticulation ...
Seite 529
... vowel inventories , vowel variation and diphthongization , stress patterns , and secondary consonant articula- tions . This is why compensatory metathesis is perhaps not as common as might other- wise be expected . We now summarize our ...
... vowel inventories , vowel variation and diphthongization , stress patterns , and secondary consonant articula- tions . This is why compensatory metathesis is perhaps not as common as might other- wise be expected . We now summarize our ...
Seite 545
... vowel epenthesis and syncope in essentially the same con- texts as we do , but with one important difference . According to Mills and Grima , the epenthetic vowel was a copy vowel , not a fixed vowel such as the schwa of our analysis ...
... vowel epenthesis and syncope in essentially the same con- texts as we do , but with one important difference . According to Mills and Grima , the epenthetic vowel was a copy vowel , not a fixed vowel such as the schwa of our analysis ...
Inhalt
Abschnitt 1 | 473 |
Abschnitt 2 | 508 |
Abschnitt 3 | 557 |
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American analysis appear approach argues argument Cambridge chapter claim cognitive communities comparative consider consonant constraints constructions contains context contrast creole derived described dialects direct discussion distinct ee noun English event evidence example expressions fact final formal forms function given grammar historical independent initial interesting interpretation involving issues John language lexical linguistic marking meaning metathesis modal morphology natural Note noun object occur original particular patterns person phonetic phonological position possible present Press problem properties proposed provides quatrain question reference relative relevant requires result role semantic sentences similar sound speakers specific stem stress structure suffix suggests syllable syntactic syntax Table thematic theory tion true types University verb volume vowel worlds