Language, Band 49,Ausgaben 3-4George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1973 |
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... Sanskrit lacks the accent limitation of Greek , and also richer because Sanskrit preserves more cases in the noun and retains accent mobility in the verb . 2. SANSKRIT . The accent system of Vedic and Pāṇinian Sanskrit is in most re ...
... Sanskrit lacks the accent limitation of Greek , and also richer because Sanskrit preserves more cases in the noun and retains accent mobility in the verb . 2. SANSKRIT . The accent system of Vedic and Pāṇinian Sanskrit is in most re ...
Seite 809
... Sanskrit , the recessive accent goes all the way to the first syllable : NOM . ( 19 ) devás VOC . déva pitá pitar ' god ' ' father ' duhitá dúhitar ' daughter ' But in Sanskrit this recessivity produces no difference in contour accent ...
... Sanskrit , the recessive accent goes all the way to the first syllable : NOM . ( 19 ) devás VOC . déva pitá pitar ' god ' ' father ' duhitá dúhitar ' daughter ' But in Sanskrit this recessivity produces no difference in contour accent ...
Seite 820
... Sanskrit is that the rules apply to moras in Greek but to syllables in Sanskrit . This at once raises an important historical question : did the PIE accent rules apply to moras or to syllables ? This is nothing but a reformulation of ...
... Sanskrit is that the rules apply to moras in Greek but to syllables in Sanskrit . This at once raises an important historical question : did the PIE accent rules apply to moras or to syllables ? This is nothing but a reformulation of ...
Inhalt
Truth is a linguistic question | 539 |
Rule insertion | 551 |
Abstract vowel harmony systems in Uralic and Altaic languages | 579 |
Urheberrecht | |
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abstract accent acute alternation analysis appear apply assume Ateso become Black borrowing claim complement complete consider contrast corresponding cultural derived dialects discussion distinction ending English evidence example existence explain fact final formation forms further Germanic give given grammar Greek historical implications important inflection innovation interesting involved John kind language latter least lexical linguistic meaning middle modality mora nature negative nouns occur original paradigm pattern person phonetic phonological position possible present presuppositions problem produce proposed question reason reference relations represent respect result rule Sanskrit seems semantic sense sentence situation solution sound speakers speech stems strong structure suffix suggest syllable Table thematic theory tion Tororo underlying University verbs vowel weak