Language, Bände 6-11Linguistic Society of America, 1934 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 61
Seite 338
... phoneme [ e ] , then , appears only in stressed and pretonic positions , while [ i ] alone can appear in unstressed ... phoneme ; etc. From the analysis of the unstressed sound [ 1 ] , it is clear that one might also regard it as a ...
... phoneme [ e ] , then , appears only in stressed and pretonic positions , while [ i ] alone can appear in unstressed ... phoneme ; etc. From the analysis of the unstressed sound [ 1 ] , it is clear that one might also regard it as a ...
Seite 246
Phoneme as a physical reality ' Twaddell points out two kinds of defini- tions of the phoneme , which represent two different methods of dealing with the matter of positional variants : ( 1 ) as a constant characteristic feature that ...
Phoneme as a physical reality ' Twaddell points out two kinds of defini- tions of the phoneme , which represent two different methods of dealing with the matter of positional variants : ( 1 ) as a constant characteristic feature that ...
Seite 248
... phoneme has been used by a few linguists to refer to what I should call the psychological correlate of the phoneme , but this type of definition has been losing ground ; thus : ' the Cercle linguistique de Prague , which in 1929 defined ...
... phoneme has been used by a few linguists to refer to what I should call the psychological correlate of the phoneme , but this type of definition has been losing ground ; thus : ' the Cercle linguistique de Prague , which in 1929 defined ...
Inhalt
R WHITNEY TUCKER Linguistic Substrata in Pennsylvania | 1 |
ALBERT MOREY STURTEVANT Certain Phonetic Tendencies | 17 |
Book Reviews | 32 |
19 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
ablaut accent adjective American analogy Beow Bloomfield Brut Chicago Cilentan cniht College Conn consonant derived dialect digamma diphthong Dravidian English etymology examples explained final FM Prof French German glottal Goth Grammar Greek heavy syllable Hindi Hitt Hittite Indo-Aryan Indo-Aryan languages Indo-European initial language later Latin Library light syllable Linguistic Linguistic Society masc meaning mēs nasal noun occurs Ohio Old High German original Philadelphia phoneme phrase plural position preceding present Professor pronounced pronunciation ROLAND G Romance Langs Sanskrit SC Prof schwa seems Semitic semivowels sense sing singular Society of America sound speech spirant stem suffix swide symbols tion Tocharian transcription variants Vedic verb voiced voiceless voiceless consonants vowel Vulgar Latin weoren word Yale University York City þat