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Articulatory Inertia vs 'Systemzwang': Changes in Liaison Phenomena in Recent British English
The results of adjusting the phonological form of a morpheme or word to suit the particular needs of the context are the well-known processes of assimilation, elision and liaison. Allerton considers similar trends towards and restraints on easier pronunciations achieved not through assimilation but...
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Published in: | English studies 2000-12, Vol.81 (6), p.574-581 |
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container_title | English studies |
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creator | Allerton, D.J. |
description | The results of adjusting the phonological form of a morpheme or word to suit the particular needs of the context are the well-known processes of assimilation, elision and liaison. Allerton considers similar trends towards and restraints on easier pronunciations achieved not through assimilation but in the field of liaison phenomena--through the use of linking consonants to avoid vowel sequences at word boundaries. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1076/enst.81.6.574.9183 |
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source | Taylor & Francis; Linguistics and Language Behavior Abstracts (LLBA); MLA International Bibliography with Full Text |
subjects | English language Linguistics Phonetics |
title | Articulatory Inertia vs 'Systemzwang': Changes in Liaison Phenomena in Recent British English |
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