Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN3110220253> ?p ?o }
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- books?vid=ISBN3110220253 chapter "Multilingual states and empires in the history of Europe: the Ottoman Empire".
- books?vid=ISBN3110220253 date "2011".
- books?vid=ISBN3110220253 editor1First "Bernd".
- books?vid=ISBN3110220253 editor1Last "Kortmann".
- books?vid=ISBN3110220253 editor2First "Johan".
- books?vid=ISBN3110220253 editor2Last "Van Der Auwera".
- books?vid=ISBN3110220253 first "Bernd".
- books?vid=ISBN3110220253 first "Lars".
- books?vid=ISBN3110220253 isCitedBy Pitch_accent.
- books?vid=ISBN3110220253 isCitedBy Turkish_Cypriots.
- books?vid=ISBN3110220253 isCitedBy Turkish_dialects.
- books?vid=ISBN3110220253 isCitedBy Turkish_people.
- books?vid=ISBN3110220253 isbn "3110220253".
- books?vid=ISBN3110220253 last "Johanson".
- books?vid=ISBN3110220253 last "Kortmann".
- books?vid=ISBN3110220253 page "6".
- books?vid=ISBN3110220253 publisher "Walter de Gruyter".
- books?vid=ISBN3110220253 quote "Both Latvian and Lithuanian are pitch languages. In Lithuanian, stressed long vocalic segments show a distinctive opposition of rising and falling pitch, cf. kar̃tų 'time:gen.pl' vs. kártų 'hang:irr.3'. In standard Latvian , long vocalic sequences distinguish three varieties of pitch: 'even', 'falling', and 'broken' . They are fully differentiated in stressed syllables only: unstressed syllables have an opposition of glottalised and non-glottalised long vocalic segments. Segments with 'even' pitch are ultra long. Neither Lithuanian nor Latvian mark pitch in their standard orthography.".
- books?vid=ISBN3110220253 title "The Languages and Linguistics of Europe".
- books?vid=ISBN3110220253 title "The Languages and Linguistics of Europe: A Comprehensive Guide, Volume 2".
- books?vid=ISBN3110220253 url v=onepage&q=consonant%20length%20latvian&f=false.
- books?vid=ISBN3110220253 year "2011".