MIT «DISSIMILATION» VERWANDTE WÖRTER IM WÖRTERBUCH ENGLISCH
dissimilation
rules
phonology
biologie
sentence
acetyl
particularly
within
historical
linguistics
phenomenon
whereby
similar
consonant
vowel
sounds
word
become
less
example
when
sound
occurs
before
dissimilation
meaning
translations
define
making
becoming
unlike
more
merriam
webster
tion
noun
ˌsi
ˈlā
shən
change
omission
identical
closely
related
examples
phonetics
contrast
with
assimilation
according
patrick
term
entered
field
century
rhetoric
been
wiktionary
jump
plural
dissimilations
dissimilating
dissimilar
encyclopedia
10 BÜCHER, DIE MIT «DISSIMILATION» IM ZUSAMMENHANG STEHEN
Entdecke den Gebrauch von
dissimilation in der folgenden bibliographischen Auswahl. Bücher, die mit
dissimilation im Zusammenhang stehen und kurze Auszüge derselben, um seinen Gebrauch in der Literatur kontextbezogen darzustellen.
2.6.2 Dissimilation Dissimilation, the opposite of assimilation, is change in which
sounds become less similar to one another. Assimilation is far more common
than dissimilation; assimilation is usually regular, general throughout the
language, ...
Lisa Purse, Lyle Campbell, 2013
2
Physiologische Chemie: t.
Dissimilation
A[ugust Friedrich] Legahn. BlOtOSY LIBRARY OROCKER Alle Rechte,
insbesondere das Übersetzungsrecht von der Verlagshandlung vorbehalten
tipamersche Buchdrucker«! in Leipztg Inhaltsverzeichnis. Dissimilation. Seite
Literatur 4 I.
A[ugust Friedrich] Legahn, 1905
3
Nhanda: An Aboriginal Language of Western Australia
... no denasalization. Interestingly, the environment for denasalization is the one
place where nasal dissimilation (detailed in 2.6.3) ... Nasal. Dissimilation. Nasal
dissimilation has been described for many Australian languages (see below).
4
The Blackwell companion to phonology. 4. Phonological interfaces
Dissimilation prototypically refers to a situation in which a segment becomes less
similar to a nearby segment with respect to a given feature. As a synchronic
alternation, it can be exemplified by liquid dissimilation in Georgian, where the ...
Marc van Oostendorp, 2011
5
Principles of Historical Linguistics
Sound. change: Dissimilation,. haplology,. metathesis. Except where noted, the
changes discussed in this chapter normally are irregular or sporadic. Section 6.3
deals with the conditions which seem to be conducive for the regular application
...
6
Phonology: Critical Concepts in Linguistics
Thus it seems that laterals do have cues that require a long time window for their
perception and so their involvement in dissimilation is not puzzling. In addition,
the study of O'Connor et al. (l957) suggests why /l/ generally dissimilates to /r/ ...
Charles W. Kreidler, 2001
7
Glossary of Hindi/Urdu and English linguistic terminology : ...
asannihit —, remote dissimilation (CSTT 1974: 1099; CSTT 1982: 72; CSTT 1992
: 131); avyavhit -, contact dissimilation (CSTT 1973: 295; CSTT 1992: 1 3 1); pasc
- -, regressive dissimilation (CSTT 1992: 172); purah -, progressive dissimilation ...
8
The Synchronic and Diachronic Phonology of Ejectives
Should there be a consensus that Proto-Semitic had ejectives, then Akkadian
should be considered an example of ejective dissimilation. Otherwise, it should
be considered in conjunction with other laryngeal-type dissimilations such as ...
9
Issues in the Phonology and Morphology of the Major Iberian ...
Sonorant. Dissimilation. in. the. Iberian. Languages. Maria-Rosa Lloret 1.
Introduction The original Feature Geometry models of Clements (1985) and
Sagey (1986) have been continuously revised in order to improve different
aspects of the ...
Fernando Martínez-Gil, Alfonso Morales-Front, 1997
10
Invariance and Variability in Speech Processes
These two examples are cases of dissimilation: (liven twn segments sharing one
or more phonetic features, the values for smne or all of these features change in
one segment so that the two become more phonetically dilferent. These cases ...
J. S. Perkell, D. H. Klatt, 2014
10 NACHRICHTEN, IN DENEN DER BEGRIFF «DISSIMILATION» VORKOMMT
Erfahre, worüber man in den einheimischen und internationalen Medien spricht und wie der Begriff
dissimilation im Kontext der folgenden Nachrichten gebraucht wird.
The history of the word 'bad', Chapter 2
However, I needed no reference to dissimilation. Nor will I need it in the future. To be concluded. Image credits: (1) “Bad” in Volume I of the ... «OUPblog, Jul 15»
We set off to find the elusive pilcrow
... in which the “l” replaced the “r” of paragraph: Oxford calls this process “dissimilation.” Then English ears tried to hear these French imports as ... «Christian Science Monitor, Jun 15»
National curriculum for indigenous languages to come soon
"If you don't support local languages you are engaging in further dissimilation and erosion of identification, often leading to serious social ... «The Sunshine Coast Daily, Mai 15»
Lessons from the Ebola Crisis as UNMIL Transitions
Alleviate Public Mistrust, Denial, and Poor Information Dissimilation Even though, the government of Liberia informed citizens about the ... «Perspective, Mai 15»
Pronunciation change neither right nor wrong
The pronunciation of February that troubles some reflects a linguistic process called "dissimilation," in which one sound drops out because ... «theday.com, Jan 15»
Hyphenated-Americans don't undermine American identity
This value shift — or what sociologists call "homeland dissimilation" — is pretty well established for other contemporary immigrants, including ... «The Week Magazine, Jan 15»
These crimes have everything to do with Islam
In France, a form of dissimilation (to borrow a term from phonetics) is taking place. About 40 per cent of young Muslims are unemployed and ... «The Age, Jan 15»
Where did the months get their names?
The dropping of the “r” is called “dissimilation,'' when sounds near each other are so similar that one gets changed. Similar examples of this are ... «The Virginian-Pilot, Jan 15»
Race and Reaction
... or Black Power, or any of the movements that preached dissimilation, self-segregation, and hatred toward whites, merely because they were ... «American Thinker, Nov 14»
Why is 'colonel' spelled that way?
A common process called dissimilation — when two instances of the same sound occur close to each other in a word, people tend to change ... «The Week Magazine, Aug 14»