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In the 8th century an [ h ] ( glottal fricative ) allophone developed , at first in initial position . ' 2. In early Old English intervocalic [ x ] became [ h ) . This subsequently was voiced to a vowel homorganic with the following ...
In the 8th century an [ h ] ( glottal fricative ) allophone developed , at first in initial position . ' 2. In early Old English intervocalic [ x ] became [ h ) . This subsequently was voiced to a vowel homorganic with the following ...
Seite 484
Recent observations strongly suggest the possibility that the significant fact about initial position at least is NOT that * i does not occur there but that * ye does not . Indeed there is good reason to suspect that in the late stage ...
Recent observations strongly suggest the possibility that the significant fact about initial position at least is NOT that * i does not occur there but that * ye does not . Indeed there is good reason to suspect that in the late stage ...
Seite 487
As in ' bark ' and ' dish ' it is Fox which has the reflex of * a ; if we assume that an old initial * w has been lost in the late PA period , the Fox vowel is no longer unexplainable . The primosyllabic long vowel in A hiicóoón ( obv . ) ...
As in ' bark ' and ' dish ' it is Fox which has the reflex of * a ; if we assume that an old initial * w has been lost in the late PA period , the Fox vowel is no longer unexplainable . The primosyllabic long vowel in A hiicóoón ( obv . ) ...
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Inhalt
A restriction on Grassmanns Law in Greek | 7 |
Breaking umlaut and the Southern drawl | 18 |
The meaning of German noch | 42 |
Urheberrecht | |
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accent alternation American analysis appear assume become called Chinese comparative considered consonant construction contain contrast corresponding derived dialects discussion distinction elements English evidence example expression fact final forms further German gerund give given glide grammar Hare historical indicative initial interest involved language later Latin learning lines linguistic marked meaning morpheme morphophonemic noun object occur original pair parallelism pattern phonemic phonological pitch position possible preceding present probably problem question reference represented result Review rules seems semantic sentence sequence similar song sound speaker speech stem stop stress structure suffix suggested syllable syntactic Table theory tion tone translation units University variants verb verbal vowel