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Schwa-Alternationen und Orthographie
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Articulatory and phonological performance in people with mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's disease: A scoping review. [PDF]
Cera M +5 more
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Chants across seven traditions share acoustic traits that enhance subjective relaxation. [PDF]
Canessa-Pollard V, Anikin A, Reby D.
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Schwa vs. Schwa + /r/ in German
Phonetica, 1995Abstract German has two functionally distinctive vowels that only occur in unstressed position, one being schwa, the other stemming from schwa + vocalized /r/. Although traditionally acknowledged, with an established IPA symbolic representation [e] vs.
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Lingua, 1990
Abstract The purpose of this paper is to present a non-linear account of Schwa Deletion in Hindi. Ohala (1987) has argued that her linear analysis (Ohala (1983)) is superior to D'Souza's (1985) non-linear analysis, which yields observationally incorrect outputs.
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Abstract The purpose of this paper is to present a non-linear account of Schwa Deletion in Hindi. Ohala (1987) has argued that her linear analysis (Ohala (1983)) is superior to D'Souza's (1985) non-linear analysis, which yields observationally incorrect outputs.
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Lingua, 1985
This paper attempts a new analysis of the complex problem of the behavior and representation of the schwa vowel in Berber. The analysis, which tries to remedy the shortcomings of the previous studies in this area, relies on a theory of syllable structure (first sketched in work by Halle and Vergnaud (1980) ) in which phonological segments are ...
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This paper attempts a new analysis of the complex problem of the behavior and representation of the schwa vowel in Berber. The analysis, which tries to remedy the shortcomings of the previous studies in this area, relies on a theory of syllable structure (first sketched in work by Halle and Vergnaud (1980) ) in which phonological segments are ...
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2016
Eastern Armenian (EA) has been described as having stress on the final full vowel of a word (i.e., non-schwa) (Dum-Tragut 2009, Hulst 1999, Khachatryan 1988, Vaux 1998), making the language a sonority-driven stress system (Kenstowicz 1994, de Lacy 2004).
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Eastern Armenian (EA) has been described as having stress on the final full vowel of a word (i.e., non-schwa) (Dum-Tragut 2009, Hulst 1999, Khachatryan 1988, Vaux 1998), making the language a sonority-driven stress system (Kenstowicz 1994, de Lacy 2004).
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