Diglossia: A Study of the Theory with Application to Tamil |
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Page 86
... phonemes , no no characters were created , even though they were used as phonemes in the English loans used in Tamil ( see 9.1 ) . 5.7 Linguistic and literary heritage 5.7.1 Introduction . In an article that may perhaps be the harshest ...
... phonemes , no no characters were created , even though they were used as phonemes in the English loans used in Tamil ( see 9.1 ) . 5.7 Linguistic and literary heritage 5.7.1 Introduction . In an article that may perhaps be the harshest ...
Page 173
... phonemes , but most authors would consider them to be in free variation or in complementary distribu- tion ... phonemes to describe native words . Of these , 28 are actually 14 pairs of single and double consonants ( Firth treats [ t ] ...
... phonemes , but most authors would consider them to be in free variation or in complementary distribu- tion ... phonemes to describe native words . Of these , 28 are actually 14 pairs of single and double consonants ( Firth treats [ t ] ...
Page 174
... phonemes . In the analysis of Andronov ( 1969 : 32 ) , there are 17 consonantal phonemes corresponding to the 18 native graphemes except- ing < g > ; Andronov seems to consider [ g ] as an allophone of another nasal . Andronov's ten ...
... phonemes . In the analysis of Andronov ( 1969 : 32 ) , there are 17 consonantal phonemes corresponding to the 18 native graphemes except- ing < g > ; Andronov seems to consider [ g ] as an allophone of another nasal . Andronov's ten ...
Contents
Notes for Chapter 1 | 26 |
Notes for Chapter 2 | 40 |
Note for Chapter 3 | 49 |
Copyright | |
16 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
according acquisition appear Arokianathan Authentic Authentic domain Authentic speech authors Brahmin called caste century characteristics Classical codes Colloquial Colloquial Tamil considered contemporary context conversation Correct defined described dialect dialogue diasystem diglossia diglossic discourses discussion distinguish domain educated English example fact Fasold Ferguson Fishman's formal functional given grammar graphemes H and L historical Hybrid identified Immutable includes India instance involving language learned least less linguistic literary literature Marked meaning Mutable names native nature Non-Authentic domain norms noted Optimal oral original pairs pattern period person Pillai popular present prestige Pure Purity question reading refer regional represent rules Sanskrit scholars seems sense situation social sounds speak speakers speech spoken standard structural style Suggestive superposed Tamil diglossia Tamil H Tamil Nadu theory tion tradition types usage Use-Oriented variation variety various vowel whereas writing written Zvelebil