10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «PHONEMATIC»
Discover the use of
phonematic in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
phonematic and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
The observation recorded byHubbellis certainly of first-rate importance, and due
phonematic consequences should be derived from it. Hubbell himself attempts to
do so in the following statement: "In the New York dialect the assignment of ...
2
Cognitive Psychology and Reading in the USSR
Unfortunately, concrete methods of developing phonematic hearing have not yet
been fully studied. Usually, no special time is assigned to developing phonematic
hearing and it is just left to occur incidentally when pupils are learning letters ...
3
Morphologie / Morphology. 1. Halbband
Prosody and phonematic unit A prosody is any phonetic feature that
characterizes a unit larger than a single segment. A phonematic unit, on the other
hand, is an element which is sequential and segmental. Given the greater
importance of ...
Geert E. Booij, Christian Lehmann, Joachim Mugdan, 2000
4
Linguistics Encyclopedia
What remains when all the prosodies have been abstracted are the phonological
units which prosodists call phonematic units. These are—unlike prosodies—
segmental, hence linear, units, which are considered as being placed at
particular ...
5
Written Language Revisited
It cannot, therefore, be denied that the basic principle underlying the use of one
and the same grapheme for /kV and /k/ is, to some extent at least, based on
phonematic considerations. Moreover, if economical considerations are often
adduced ...
Josef Vachek, Philip Luelsdorff, 1989
In the prosodic analysis of a language, phonological structures consist of
phonematic units and prosodies, and the phonological system of the language
comprises both sorts of element, subdivided into different types according to the ...
7
Collected Papers of Stig Kanger with Essays on his Life and Work
We may get an example of a phonematic base for D that is equivalent with F if we
modify F by increasing the stress or the pitch of the members of F in a manner
that preserves relative stress and pitch in F. (We increase the volume or the
speed ...
Stig Kanger, Ghita Holmström-Hintikka, Sten Lindström, 2001
8
Introduction to Theoretical Linguistics
By contrast, Hi can take the value 'positive' or 'negative' independently in all
syllables. We will now distinguish +Hi and —Hi as phonematic units (n.b. not '
phonemes') and symbolize them as 'I' and 'A', respectively. The effect of this
distinction ...
9
Methods of Teaching English
But the international features help us distinguish between different types of
utterance especially with reference to attitudes and 'mood' (question, statement),
the phonematic and prosodic elements remaining the same. Some prosodic
features ...
10
A Dictionary of Phonetics and Phonology
See Abercrombie (1985) for an account. Harrington (1912). phonemateme /'fəʊni
:məti:m/ n. In Glossematic phonology a segment from the point of view of its
phonetic characteristics, as opposed to its place in the system: a phone.
phonematic ...