The New Encyclopædia BritannicaEncyclopædia Britannica, 1992 |
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Page 45
... phonemes and are distinguished from phones by enclosing their appropriate symbol ( normally , but not necessarily , an alphabetic one ) between two slash marks . Thus / p / refers to a phoneme that may be realized on different occasions ...
... phonemes and are distinguished from phones by enclosing their appropriate symbol ( normally , but not necessarily , an alphabetic one ) between two slash marks . Thus / p / refers to a phoneme that may be realized on different occasions ...
Page 46
... phoneme / p / or whether each realizes a different phoneme . They satisfy the criterion of phonetic similarity , but this , though a necessary condition of phonemic identity , is not a sufficient one . The next question is whether there ...
... phoneme / p / or whether each realizes a different phoneme . They satisfy the criterion of phonetic similarity , but this , though a necessary condition of phonemic identity , is not a sufficient one . The next question is whether there ...
Page 55
... phoneme to be the minimal unit of analysis . Instead , Phonemes they defined phonemes as sets of distinctive features . For example , in English , / b / differs from / p / in the same way that / d / differs from / t / and / g / from / k ...
... phoneme to be the minimal unit of analysis . Instead , Phonemes they defined phonemes as sets of distinctive features . For example , in English , / b / differs from / p / in the same way that / d / differs from / t / and / g / from / k ...
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