Papers of the ... Algonquian Conference, Volume 31Carleton University, 2000 - Algonquian Indians |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 33
Page 240
vowel had already been an established Algonquianist practice by the time Bloomfield started to work on Menominee ( Goddard 1987 : 208 ) . Bloomfield apparently changed from using a - umlaut to epsilon because of a personal orthographic ...
vowel had already been an established Algonquianist practice by the time Bloomfield started to work on Menominee ( Goddard 1987 : 208 ) . Bloomfield apparently changed from using a - umlaut to epsilon because of a personal orthographic ...
Page 241
TA - TH - 3 ' he holds him , in his hands and rubs him ' ( Bloomfield 1975 : 90 ) In la the high vowel of the last syllable causes the long / o : / to its left to raise to [ u : ] . In lb the / o : / raises to su : ] because there is a ...
TA - TH - 3 ' he holds him , in his hands and rubs him ' ( Bloomfield 1975 : 90 ) In la the high vowel of the last syllable causes the long / o : / to its left to raise to [ u : ] . In lb the / o : / raises to su : ] because there is a ...
Page 251
Bloomfield sometimes relied on the phonological effects of a short vowel to decide which phoneme was present in a word ( Goddard 1987 : 185–186 ) . For example , if a phonetic [ I ] triggered vowel harmony and lengthened in related ...
Bloomfield sometimes relied on the phonological effects of a short vowel to decide which phoneme was present in a word ( Goddard 1987 : 185–186 ) . For example , if a phonetic [ I ] triggered vowel harmony and lengthened in related ...
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Contents
ALAN CALDWELL and MONICA MACAULAY | 18 |
REGNA DARNELL | 54 |
WILLIAM W GIFFIN | 68 |
Copyright | |
19 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Algonquian American analysis animate appear begin Bloomfield called Carleton University Cheyenne chief conjunct continued Cree Crown Crown Lands culture definite demonstratives early ending English example experience final fishing given gives harmony historical human hunting Illinois independent Indian indicative Island James John Journal killed kiyâ Lake land landscape language later Leman Linguistics living look marked meaning Menominee Miami Native North noted noun object obviative oral tradition original person phonemic plural present Press Quaker recorded reference ribbon River shaman singular Society stems stop story syllable theme things third told Town tracks tradition tribal tribes University VAI.CIN vowel writing written young