MOR113 - Other Word-Forms

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  • Опубліковано 22 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 6

  • @فاطمةعبدالستار-ن7م

    Thank you very much sir I really enjoyed and benefited alot from your lectures 🌹God bless you

  • @meta2006
    @meta2006 11 років тому +1

    2-)In Spanglish can't we say that we have a nasal segment from the first syllable of the blend, in this case the /n/ (if we assume ambissylabicity) which assimilates to the point of articulation of the onset segment of the next syllable of the blend /g/? Thanks and as always you rock!!!

  • @meta2006
    @meta2006 11 років тому

    Hi, I've got two questions. 1-) According to the phonotactics of English don't we have an ambisyllabic segment /n/ in Spanish? Because as far I read, the vowel /æ/ is one mora long and stressed syllables and lexical monosyllabic words in English must have a VX rhyme (V=vowel, and X=any segment) so the /n/ segment covers at the same time the coda of the first syllable and the onset of the other.

  • @Mansouralfaransyy
    @Mansouralfaransyy 11 років тому

    Salut. Merci pour ses leçons ! Are you sure for buku-buku ? Phoneticaly and in meaning, we think to the french determinante "beaucoup".

  • @echelonstanleydoha2804
    @echelonstanleydoha2804 10 років тому +1

    hello , i don't understand why is Reduplication considered out of the non concatenative processes ... it basically operates out of the base ,right ?!
    And also , What does " PDE " stand for ?

    • @xiyuangao2344
      @xiyuangao2344 6 років тому +1

      For reduplication, examples like yum-yum, is not out of the base, or example such as ding-dong, is not totally on the base, so I think that's why here's a new branch for it.
      "PDE" stands for present day english.