PAROLE IN INGLESE ASSOCIATE CON «BIUNIQUENESS»
biuniqueness
biuniqueness
define
principle
providing
correspondence
between
phonemic
phonetic
levels
analysis
origin
biunique
ness
meaning
definitions
infoplease
pronunciation
glottopedia
axiom
explicitly
assumed
within
framework
natural
morphology
which
entails
that
every
morpheme
words
start
with
word
finder
list
prefix
search
official
starting
italian
many
other
translations
10 LIBRI IN INGLESE ASSOCIATI CON «BIUNIQUENESS»
Scopri l'uso di
biuniqueness nella seguente selezione bibliografica. Libri associati con
biuniqueness e piccoli estratti per contestualizzare il loro uso nella letteratura.
Indeed, in the first explicit treatment of the principle which was later to be called
biuniqueness, Chao (in Joos 1957:49-50) discussed 'symbolic reversibility' in
terms of the 'aspect of reading' and the 'aspect of writing'; the third and last major
...
Dell H. Hymes, John G. Fought, 1981
2
Handbook of Word-Formation
2.6 Preference for biuniqueness Another semiotically-based parameter has
biuniqueness as its most natural option. Biuniqueness, which holds if one and
the same form always has the same meaning (and vice-versa), is more natural
than ...
Pavol Štekauer, Rochelle Lieber, 2005
3
Fundamental Concepts in Phonology: Sameness and Difference
Biuniqueness. Any phone in a given environment must be an allophone of one
and only one phoneme – to prevent ambiguity and secure unique read-off. (Lass,
Phonology) 3.1 INTRODUCTION In this chapter I want to consider analyses ...
4
Phonology: Critical Concepts in Linguistics
created by him to serve as the helpless victim of a dramatic onslaught.18
Chomsky characterizes T-phonemics in terms of four conditions which he calls
linearity, invariance, biuniqueness, and local determinacy. The biuniqueness
condition, of ...
Charles W. Kreidler, 2001
5
Essays in Honor of Charles F. Hockett
This decoding face of the biuniqueness coin is anathema to generative
phonologists because it interferes, not, as they claim, with the capturing of
generalizations, but with the operose machinations of the "principle of the
transformational cycle ...
Charles F.: Festschrift Hockett, Frederick Browning Agard, 1983
6
Eight Decades of General Linguistics: The History of CIPL ...
But now observe further that the class of tentative phonemic systems, as defined,
will contain systems that fail the principle of biuniqueness. thus, for example, [k]
and [ă] are in complementary distribution in english (and, furthermore, share ...
Ferenc Kiefer, Piet van Sterkenburg, 2012
7
Copies Versus Cognates in Bound Morphology
and semantic factors, such as sharpness of boundaries and monofunctionality,
may facilitate inflectional borrowing.13 Both factors are examples of the
naturalness parameters of morphotactic transparency and biuniqueness
respectively, ...
Lars Johanson, Martine Robbeets, 2012
8
Perspectives on Historical Linguistics
This is a similar evolution towards phonological biuniqueness. Such a
generalization may follow the hierarchy of phonological processes, which can
result in rule generalization. 8.5.3.5. Two similar explanations of the direction of
phonological ...
Winfred Philipp Lehmann, Yakov Malkiel, 1982
9
Prague Linguistic Circle Papers (Travaux Du Cercle ...
Thus the preference for biuniqueness (1.1. e) results in languages with a rich
morphology, such as Turkish (s. 2), in polysyllabic word forms, and thus conflicts
with the universal, morphological preference for bisyllabic word forms (1.l.h).
Eva Hajicova, Tomas Hoskovec, Oldrich Leska, 1999
10
Transformational Grammar as a Theory of Language ...
As for the criteria of 'biuniqueness' and 'local determinacy', Chomsky invokes the
latter only in order to qualify what he means by the former, so far as 'taxonomic
phonemics' is concerned. That is, the brand of phonemics which he is criticizing ...