Language, Band 82George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 2006 |
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Seite 44
... consonant is voiced or voiceless ( Kwong & Stevens 1999 ) . Immediately preceding a voiceless consonant , as in writer or ricing , the first formant is lower and the second formant higher than for the contrasting voiced consonants in ...
... consonant is voiced or voiceless ( Kwong & Stevens 1999 ) . Immediately preceding a voiceless consonant , as in writer or ricing , the first formant is lower and the second formant higher than for the contrasting voiced consonants in ...
Seite 46
... consonant is voiceless . This process is of interest here since these words never had a nasal conso- nant in their prehistory . One can surmise that the final voiceless consonant induced some spreading of the glottis in the preceding ...
... consonant is voiceless . This process is of interest here since these words never had a nasal conso- nant in their prehistory . One can surmise that the final voiceless consonant induced some spreading of the glottis in the preceding ...
Seite 54
... consonants that precede and follow the vowel . Voicelessness for the initial consonant / p / is enhanced with a spread glottis that extends a few tens of milliseconds beyond the consonant release . The following consonant / t / also ...
... consonants that precede and follow the vowel . Voicelessness for the initial consonant / p / is enhanced with a spread glottis that extends a few tens of milliseconds beyond the consonant release . The following consonant / t / also ...
Inhalt
Language in the 21st century | 5 |
Enhancement and overlap in the speech chain Samuel Jay Keyser Kenneth Noble Stevens | 33 |
Revisiting anaphoric islands Alice C Harris | 114 |
Urheberrecht | |
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accent acoustic adjectives agreement aligned American English American speakers analysis anaphoric attractors binomial types British English British speakers CALIFORNIA/SANTA CRUZ Cambridge casemarked chapter clause clitic cognitive cognitive linguistics collective consonant constructions content-cell context contrast coradical corpus correlate Creole CRUZ The University declension derived dialects direct object discourse discussion distinction Emeneau enhancement gestures example expressions F-marking focus focused form-correspondent frequency function grammar heteroclisis inflection classes inflectional category interaction interpretation ISBN John Benjamins Journal language lexeme lexical linguistic logistic regression Markedness meaning morpheme morphological morphosyntactic nominal notion noun phrases occur onymic papers paradigm linkage pattern phonetic phonological pitch accents plural ponerse position predicted preposition pronouns proper names properties prosodic quedarse reference rule of paradigm Sanskrit semantic sentences singular specific speech stem stress structure syntactic syntax Table theory tion Tok Pisin tokens translation types variation verb vowel words