Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
But they are also not motivated by a phonological rule.
Slips are consistent with the phonological rules of the language.
In other cases, phonological rules may change the phonemes involved.
Such phonological rules may continue to apply for an indefinite amount of time.
According to research, the amount of time required to master reading depends on the language's adherence to phonological rules.
The "elsewhere" allophone is the one that remains once the conditions for the others are described by phonological rules.
Notably, however, the resulting stem is reduced according to the dialect's phonological rules.
Natural classes tend to behave in similar ways, participating in the same phonological rules.
No phonological rule is applied in the conjugation of talo 'house'.
Bleeding order is a term used in phonology to describe specific interactions of phonological rules.
He formulated and partly substantiated some phonological rules of Icelandic.
Phonological rules describe the systematic relationship between sounds.
Hayes (2009) lists the following characteristics that all phonological rules have in common:
Productivity: Phonological rules apply even to new words.
It is common to represent phonological rules using formal rewrite rules in the most general way possible.
Phonological rules can be roughly divided into four types:
The borrowed words may violate phonological rules of the Finnish language, such as vowel harmony.
The major phonological rules along with the alternations are based on or described in the following paragraphs:
A number of phonological rules can be reconstructed for Proto-Indo-European.
Pronunciation may also deviate from normal phonological rules.
A phonological rule P, , is opaque if any of the following surface structures exists:
In addition, it contains special provisions for regular phonological rules that makes exceptions to transliteration (see Korean language).
The usual phonological rules apply.
Ordered phonological rules govern how underlying representation is transformed into the actual pronunciation (the so-called surface form).
Also, phonological rules such as assimilation, palatalization, and deletion can cause pronunciation to be different from what the written form may suggest.