Language, Band 44George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1968 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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... phonemic shape but with different meanings ( meanings which are considered to be unre- lated in the synchronic plan , even though they may be historically related , as Eng . flour and flower ) . Defining near - homonyms is not so easy ...
... phonemic shape but with different meanings ( meanings which are considered to be unre- lated in the synchronic plan , even though they may be historically related , as Eng . flour and flower ) . Defining near - homonyms is not so easy ...
Seite 651
... phonemic restricting in either of the languages under consideration and which does not represent a merging or re- shuffling of previously existing synchronic phonemic contrasts is considered to be a dia - phoneme ' ( 18 ) . What Crabb ...
... phonemic restricting in either of the languages under consideration and which does not represent a merging or re- shuffling of previously existing synchronic phonemic contrasts is considered to be a dia - phoneme ' ( 18 ) . What Crabb ...
Seite 709
... phonemic representations and the underlying representa- tions of generative phonology . Both systems allow for non - unique representations . In phonemics , a resolution of this problem was found within the distinctive- feature ...
... phonemic representations and the underlying representa- tions of generative phonology . Both systems allow for non - unique representations . In phonemics , a resolution of this problem was found within the distinctive- feature ...
Inhalt
Fries obituary by Albert H Marckwardt | 205 |
Notes | 211 |
The operation and relative chronology of Verners Law | 219 |
Urheberrecht | |
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adverbials alternation American analysis appear apply Assistant Professor Associate Professor assume base basic Calif California chapter clusters College common complex considered consonant construction contains definite deletion Department derived dialects discussion distinction element ending evidence example fact final German give given grammar Hall Indic initial Institute Italy Japan John language later Library Linguistics Mass meaning Member Michigan morpheme morphophonemic names noun object occur original Ph.D phonemic phonological phrase position possible preceding present problem Professor of English proposed question reason reference reflex relative represented Research restriction result ROBERT rules seems semantic sentence stress structure syllable syntactic Texas texts theory tion Tokyo transformation underlying University verb voiced vowel Washington York