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Pages 325-351 | Published online: 16 Jun 2015

  • Noam Chomsky, Syntactic Structures (The Hague, 1957).
  • Noam Chomsky, Current Issues in Linguistic Theory (The Hague, 1964), pp. 9–10.
  • Noam Chomsky, “The Current Scene in Linguistics: Present Directions,” College English, XXVII (May, 1966), 595.
  • Language Learning, XV (1965), 189–190.
  • For example, Paul Postal, “Limitations of Phrase Structure Grammars,” in The Structure of Language: Readings in the Philosophy of Language, Eds. Jerry A. Fodor and Jerrold J. Katz (Englewood Cliffs, N.J., 1964).
  • H. A. Gleason, Jr., Linguistics and English Grammar (New York, 1965), pp. 57–58.
  • Noam Chomsky, Aspects of the Theory of Syntax (Cambridge, Mass., 1965), p. 205, n. 30.
  • Ibid., p. 67.
  • Noam Chomsky, Cartesian Linguistics: A Chapter in the History of Rationalist Thought (New York, 1966), p. 51.
  • Chomsky, “The Current Scene in Linguistics,” p. 595.
  • Ibid., p. 594.
  • Chomsky, Syntactic Structures, p. 5.
  • Chomsky, “The Current Scene in Linguistics,” pp. 591–594.
  • A publication that drew upon the files of the Project was Mary R. Haas, Thai Vocabulary (Washington, D.C., 1955).
  • See p. xxiii for a full list, as well as references to other sources.
  • As stated, e.g., in Mary R. Haas, The Thai System of Writing (Washington, D.C., 1956).
  • In this case, the folds are pulled together for the first cycle by the Bernoulli effect (a drop in air pressure along the margins of the folds caused by air rushing through the glottis).
  • Arthur S. Abramson, The Vowels and Tones of Standard Thai: Acoustical Measurements and Experiments (Bloomington, Ind., 1962), pp. 6–9.
  • Except for the velars. There is no initial voiced velar stop.
  • Leigh Lisker and Arthur S. Abramson, “A Cross-Language Study of Voicing in Initial Stops: Acoustical Measurements,” Word, XX (1964), 384–422. See pp. 390, 396, 404–406, and 411 for Thai data.
  • One way to handle this high emphatic tone is to provide an intensifier rule as an optional transformation. See Udom Warotamasikkhadit, Thai Syntax: an Outline (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Texas, 1963), pp. 72–73.
  • For a recent discussion of these matters, see Panninee Rudaravanija, An Analysis of the Elements in Thai that Correspond to the Basic Intonation Patterns of English (Ed.D. dissertation, Teachers College, Columbia University, 1965).
  • An early attempt, prepared for a contrastive analysis, is to be found in Chalao Chaiyaratana, A Comparative Study of English and Thai Syntax (Ph.D. dissertation, Indiana University, 1961). A later, more detailed transformational grammar is that of Warotamasikkhadit (see n. 8).
  • A more comprehensive Modern Thai-English Dictionary is planned as the ultimate outcome of the Project.
  • Ayo Bamgbose, “Assimilation and Contraction in Yoruba,” Journal of West African Languages, II, No. 1 (1965), 21–27.
  • R. C. Abraham usually records a full vowel here; see Dictionary of Modern Yoruba (London, 1958).
  • This reviewer is currently working on this problem.

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