Phasing and Recoverability is a 1997 book by Daniel Silverman in which the author provides a hypothesis that examines not only at the physical structure of speech, but also the phonological issue of salience. The book is a revised edition of Silverman's 1995 UCLA dissertation.[1]
Author | Daniel Silverman |
---|---|
Language | English |
Subject | phonology |
Publisher | Garland Publishing |
Publication date | 1997 |
Media type | |
Pages | 242 |
ISBN | 9780815328766 |
Reception
editThe book was reviewed by Kimary Shahin (from Birzeit University/University of British Columbia) and Stefan Frisch (from University of Michigan).[2][3]
References
edit- ^ Esther, Herrera Z. (2000). "Amuzgo and Zapotec: Two More Cases of Laryngeally Complex Languages". Anthropological Linguistics. 42 (4): 545–563. ISSN 0003-5483.
- ^ Shahin, Kimary (4 February 1999). "LINGUIST List 10.170: Silverman: Phasing & Recoverability (2nd rev.)". The LINGUIST List.[user-generated source]
- ^ Frisch, Stefan A (10 November 1998). "LINGUIST List 9.1588: Silverman: Phasing and recoverability". The LINGUIST List.[user-generated source]
External links
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