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  • ...gy or phonetics, '''co-articulation''' is the adjustment of a sound to its environment.
    518 bytes (64 words) - 14:28, 20 February 2009
  • ...l neutralization''' is the loss of phonological distinctions in a specific environment.
    699 bytes (89 words) - 13:17, 15 May 2008
  • ...instantiate phonological changes in certain [[morpheme]]s in the immediate environment of some other [[morpheme]]s.
    747 bytes (98 words) - 15:45, 28 January 2008
  • ...ctions''' are the [[semantic restrictions]] that a [[word]] imposes on the environment in which it occurs.
    926 bytes (131 words) - 18:04, 21 February 2009
  • ...tratum]]). Each subformula is allowed to operate only if the conditioning environment(s) of what precedes it does not apply.
    2 KB (236 words) - 06:21, 8 October 2017
  • ...er is intended to direct their attention towards something in the physical environment.
    1 KB (187 words) - 16:36, 6 June 2008
  • ...of sonorants. If there is a rule which devoices obstruents in a particular environment, say word final, this rule will be structure-changing if it changes [-son,
    961 bytes (130 words) - 08:11, 16 August 2014
  • ...ch ''Umwelt'', nach dem Vorbild von französisch ''milieu'' oder englisch ''environment'' entstanden, aber formal unabhängig davon.
    1 KB (152 words) - 21:26, 25 June 2007
  • ...l Erich Heidolph had the most authoritive participation in the exploratory environment of the scientific climate. He delivered new and often unconventional ideas
    2 KB (298 words) - 15:58, 23 February 2009
  • ...distributed throughout speech predictably and with regards to the phonetic environment. Allophones can also be [[free variants]].
    1 KB (224 words) - 15:12, 3 August 2014
  • ...conceptual schemes prevailed among the structuralists in his intellectual environment, he always supported his descriptive conclusions by numerical data. In his
    4 KB (585 words) - 21:36, 3 April 2008
  • ...environment – and since the environment includes the text (the linguistic environment), reference takes on a cohesive function” (HALLIDAY & HASAN 1994:226f.). Endophoric reference points to the textual environment of a given element can be either '''anaphoric''' or '''cataphoric'''. Anaph
    22 KB (3,425 words) - 17:49, 26 June 2010
  • ...system that develops in reaction to the properties and requirements of its environment by adaptation mechanisms in analogy to biological evolution) makes possible
    5 KB (695 words) - 09:39, 14 September 2014
  • ...in 1881. For his habilitation project, a study of the effect of the Arctic environment on the migrations of the Inuit Eskimos, he went on a field trip to Baffin I
    7 KB (1,043 words) - 11:32, 2 December 2007
  • ...ty), which designate the two basic types of situation found in our natural environment (cf. Verkuyl 1993: 43). [[Lexical aspect]] and its difference from [[gramma
    6 KB (819 words) - 09:15, 14 June 2014
  • ...ests developed during his early youth. Growing up in an Alemannic-speaking environment, close to the Swabian dialect region, he already as a schoolboy occupied hi
    8 KB (1,116 words) - 18:17, 6 July 2007
  • ...Alveolar /ǃ/ and lateral /ǁ/ (medium light grey) are not attested in this environment. However, it is suspected these gaps may be accidental, given that only two ...r than that /ɦ/ is elided under some conditions. A predictive conditioning environment for the presence or absence of [ɦ] has not been discovered, but prosody ma
    26 KB (3,968 words) - 08:14, 5 January 2021
  • ...their parents’ language because their socialisation takes place in the new environment – partly or completely. However, in a time of globalisation the chances f
    18 KB (2,684 words) - 16:51, 22 May 2013
  • ...unciation of the velar plosives <g> and <k> differs according to the sound environment of the subsequent vowel.
    36 KB (4,969 words) - 13:01, 2 March 2018