<--- Back to Details
First PageDocument Content
Phonology / Poetry / African-American culture / Phonaesthetics / Word play / Mora / Japanese phonology / Japanese hip hop / Perfect rhyme / Literature / Rhyme / Linguistics
Date: 2013-09-04 10:39:02
Phonology
Poetry
African-American culture
Phonaesthetics
Word play
Mora
Japanese phonology
Japanese hip hop
Perfect rhyme
Literature
Rhyme
Linguistics

TRACK 9 Dragon Ash and the Reinterpretation of Hip Hop

Add to Reading List

Source URL: www.indiana.edu

Download Document from Source Website

File Size: 290,16 KB

Share Document on Facebook

Similar Documents

The morpho-phonology of simple abbreviated loanwords in Japanese: a constraint-based account

DocID: 1vpkh - View Document

Word-Internal Phrase Boundary in Japanese William J. Poser Stanford University [This paper appeared in: in Sharon Inkelas & Draga Zec (eds.) The Phonology-Syntax Connection. Center for the Study of Language

DocID: 1uHHZ - View Document

Culture / Linguistics / Language / Tone / Prosody / Phonetics / Phonology / Systemic functional linguistics / ToBI / Intonation / Pitch accent / Japanese pitch accent

Intertranscriber Reliability of Prosodic Labeling on Telephone Conversation Using ToBI Tae-Jin Yoon1 , Sandra Chavarr´ıa1 , Jennifer Cole1 & Mark Hasegawa-Johnson2 Department of Linguistics1 ; Department of Electrical

DocID: 1r9q5 - View Document

Linguistics / Phonology / Poetic rhythm / Poetic form / Phonetics / Metre / Syllable / Metrical phonology / Prosody / Poetry / Hemistich / Syllabic verse

On the relation of prosody to metrical structure in Old Japanese The specific set of properties employed in the formal-poetic system(s) of a given language derive in part from the properties of the underlying linguistic

DocID: 1qSnV - View Document

Linguistics / English phonology / Language / Phonology / English orthography / Transcription into Japanese

CODE VARIATION Flip Chart Code Variation Flip Chart for each vowel sound in the English Language. Each page is organized from most frequently occurring variation to least frequently occurring variation. Page

DocID: 1q0aU - View Document