Language, Bände 26-31George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1955 Proceedings of the annual meeting of the Society in v. 1-11, 1925-34. After 1934 they appear in Its Bulletin. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 61
Seite 193
... beginning with / hi / : Hip - high in water . | Hit it back ! Hickory nuts are still available . | Hidden meanings were discovered . And so on . When we continue this collection of utterances beginning with / hi / we find one or another ...
... beginning with / hi / : Hip - high in water . | Hit it back ! Hickory nuts are still available . | Hidden meanings were discovered . And so on . When we continue this collection of utterances beginning with / hi / we find one or another ...
Seite 194
... beginning with / h / there are 9 different phonemes following the / h / ; in those that begin with / hi / there are ... beginning with / hiyz / there are again 29 phonemes after / hiyz / , as in He's pretending , He's trying to , etc ...
... beginning with / h / there are 9 different phonemes following the / h / ; in those that begin with / hi / there are ... beginning with / hiyz / there are again 29 phonemes after / hiyz / , as in He's pretending , He's trying to , etc ...
Seite 473
... beginning and ending sounded like the beginning and ending of the entry syllable , there is no reason why he could not end up writing part of the syllable twice . A British speaker might well say that the word due / dyuw / be- gins like ...
... beginning and ending sounded like the beginning and ending of the entry syllable , there is no reason why he could not end up writing part of the syllable twice . A British speaker might well say that the word due / dyuw / be- gins like ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
adjective allomorphs allophones American analysis Aragonese Associate Professor Bernard Bloch Calif chapter classes clusters College consonant contrast culture derived dialects diphthongs discussion distinction distribution Dravidian etymology evidence example fact forms French Fries Fries's Fuero Gaulish gemination German Gorosch grammar Greek Indo-European initial interpretation juncture language Latin Library linguistic loanwords meaning modern morpheme morphological noun occur Old English pattern Ph.D phonemes phonology phrase plural position possible present problem Professor of English pronunciation reference relation reviewer REW³ Romance Romance Languages Sanskrit seems segmentation semantic semivowels sentence sequence Slavic Languages sound Spanish speakers speech spelling spirant statement stem stress structure successors suffix syllable symbols synonymy syntactic syntax Teruel theory tion Trager and Smith Trager-Smith University utterance variants verbs vocabulary vowel Vulgar Latin words