A Language Suppressed: The Pronunciation of the Scots Language in the 18th CenturyJ.Donald Publishers, 1995 - 278 páginas |
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Página 4
... Written in a context where there had been a century of prescriptive grammar , spelling and pronouncing manual writing by the most eminent linguists of both countries , this amounts almost to an admission of failure . The notion that ...
... Written in a context where there had been a century of prescriptive grammar , spelling and pronouncing manual writing by the most eminent linguists of both countries , this amounts almost to an admission of failure . The notion that ...
Página 230
... written shun . ' Perhaps a more convincing explanation for the [ t ] → [ ] change might come from a consideration of what could provoke such a shift from the non vocalic end of the sonority hierarchy to a place on that scale where ...
... written shun . ' Perhaps a more convincing explanation for the [ t ] → [ ] change might come from a consideration of what could provoke such a shift from the non vocalic end of the sonority hierarchy to a place on that scale where ...
Página 253
... Written language having been found to answer its purpose without this appendage , it was thought unnecessary to introduce it when musicians and grammarians had observed its existence and the order upon the nature of accent in audible ...
... Written language having been found to answer its purpose without this appendage , it was thought unnecessary to introduce it when musicians and grammarians had observed its existence and the order upon the nature of accent in audible ...
Conteúdo
CHAPTER | 11 |
The Source Materials and the Nature of the Evidence | 22 |
CHAPTER 3 | 50 |
Direitos autorais | |
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Termos e frases comuns
18th century accent Adams alternation appear attempt Book broad Buchanan called characteristic claims close common consonantal consonants contemporary context contrast describes detail Dictionary difficult diphthong discussion distinction distinguished Edinburgh Elphinston England English Language entry especially evidence examples expressed fact final French Geddes give Grammar guttural hard instance interpretation James kind labial length letter lexical linguistic lists London manner marked means method native nature notably notes observers orthography palatal particular perhaps period phonetic phonology principle pronounced pronunciation proper provides provincial pure dialect realisation records represent respect rhyme rules Scotch Scotland Scots Scottish seems segments short similar sonorant sound speak speakers speech Spelling standard stressed suggest syllable Sylvester Douglas symbol terminations tongue true types vocal voice vowel words writing written