Language, Band 49,Ausgaben 3-4George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1973 |
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... nouns may be read as also [ + viscous ] if nothing blocks a presupposition of [ + wet ] . An example of a sort of semantic discovery resulting from L's study might be his finding ( 86 ) that the class of concrete - count - noun stems ...
... nouns may be read as also [ + viscous ] if nothing blocks a presupposition of [ + wet ] . An example of a sort of semantic discovery resulting from L's study might be his finding ( 86 ) that the class of concrete - count - noun stems ...
Seite 803
... nouns of the basically unac- cented class are accented by exactly the same rules , they must receive superfi- cially different accent patterns because of their different morphological structure . In the athematic nouns , which are ...
... nouns of the basically unac- cented class are accented by exactly the same rules , they must receive superfi- cially different accent patterns because of their different morphological structure . In the athematic nouns , which are ...
Seite 819
... nouns ending in sonorants . We saw that what superficially appear to be different accent classes in the -n - stems ( ātmán vs. mūrdhán ) , in the -r - stems ( nar vs. pitár ) , and in the -i- and -u - stems ( arí vs. agní ) could all be ...
... nouns ending in sonorants . We saw that what superficially appear to be different accent classes in the -n - stems ( ātmán vs. mūrdhán ) , in the -r - stems ( nar vs. pitár ) , and in the -i- and -u - stems ( arí vs. agní ) could all be ...
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