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. |
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Seite 192
... phonemes occur ( in various utterances ) after the first n phonemes of some test utterance . It will be found that the number of these possible successors to the first n phonemes varies with n : in the test utterance of §1 , 14 different ...
... phonemes occur ( in various utterances ) after the first n phonemes of some test utterance . It will be found that the number of these possible successors to the first n phonemes varies with n : in the test utterance of §1 , 14 different ...
Seite 193
... phonemes . ( For the relevance of phonemic contours and junctures , see §2 . ) We collect many utterances which begin with the first phoneme of our test utterance U , and count how many different phonemes occupy the second position in ...
... phonemes . ( For the relevance of phonemic contours and junctures , see §2 . ) We collect many utterances which begin with the first phoneme of our test utterance U , and count how many different phonemes occupy the second position in ...
Seite 195
... phonemic distinctions in an utterance is precisely its phonemic spelling . However , simplifications of phonemic systems have led to various departures from the pure successive representation of simple segmental phonemes . Intonations ...
... phonemic distinctions in an utterance is precisely its phonemic spelling . However , simplifications of phonemic systems have led to various departures from the pure successive representation of simple segmental phonemes . Intonations ...
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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