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THE SYLLABLE IN PHONOLOGICAL THEORY JOAN B. HOOPER University of California , Los Angeles The syllable is an important phonological unit that must be formally defined within generative phonology . Evidence from Spanish , German , and ...
THE SYLLABLE IN PHONOLOGICAL THEORY JOAN B. HOOPER University of California , Los Angeles The syllable is an important phonological unit that must be formally defined within generative phonology . Evidence from Spanish , German , and ...
Seite 533
The concept of the syllable has been used in generative analyses to account for such prosodic features as stress . According to McCawley 1968 , the best way to predict accent placement in Japanese is in terms of syllables .
The concept of the syllable has been used in generative analyses to account for such prosodic features as stress . According to McCawley 1968 , the best way to predict accent placement in Japanese is in terms of syllables .
Seite 534
It would be possible , however , to postulate underlying syllables , marked off by syllable boundaries in the lexicon . The one advantage to this system is that the marking conventions and morpheme - structure conditions could refer to ...
It would be possible , however , to postulate underlying syllables , marked off by syllable boundaries in the lexicon . The one advantage to this system is that the marking conventions and morpheme - structure conditions could refer to ...
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Inhalt
Outlines and overlays | 513 |
The syllable in phonological theory | 525 |
Some arguments against ordered rules | 541 |
Urheberrecht | |
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accent analysis appear apply argument assigned assume becomes boundary chapter Chinook claim clause clear considered consonant construction contains contrast course definition derived described dialects discussion distinction effect elements English evidence examples existence explain expression fact FIGURE final function further give given grammar important indicate interesting interpretation intonation Jargon John kind language lexical linguistic marked meaning natural negative NEGCONCORD nominal normal noun object observations occur original pattern phonetic phonological phrase pitch position possible preceding predicate preposition present Press problem proposed provides question reading reason reference relative represent result rule seems segments semantic sense sentence similar speaker speech stress structure suggests surface syllable syntactic theory tion transformational underlying University verb vowel