
Contents
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32.1 Orthography 32.1 Orthography
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32.1.1 Unstressed Vowels 32.1.1 Unstressed Vowels
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32.1.1.1 Pretonic Vowels 32.1.1.1 Pretonic Vowels
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32.1.1.2 Posttonic Vowels 32.1.1.2 Posttonic Vowels
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32.1.2 Consonants 32.1.2 Consonants
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32.2 Phonology 32.2 Phonology
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32.2.1 Loss of Functional [h] 32.2.1 Loss of Functional [h]
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32.2.2 Stressed Vowels 32.2.2 Stressed Vowels
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32.2.2.1 Vowel Lowering before [x] 32.2.2.1 Vowel Lowering before [x]
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32.2.2.2 Merger of Vowels 11 and 34 32.2.2.2 Merger of Vowels 11 and 34
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32.2.2.3 Merger of Vowels 51 and 31 32.2.2.3 Merger of Vowels 51 and 31
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32.2.2.4 Vowels 12 and 13 Yield [u] 32.2.2.4 Vowels 12 and 13 Yield [u]
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32.2.2.5 Possible Realizations of Vowel 25 32.2.2.5 Possible Realizations of Vowel 25
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32.2.2.6 The Stressed-Vowel System 32.2.2.6 The Stressed-Vowel System
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32.3 Lexicon 32.3 Lexicon
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32.4 Morphology 32.4 Morphology
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32.4.1 Archaic Features 32.4.1 Archaic Features
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32 The Language of the Eastern Version [Novidvor, c. 1783]
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Published:July 1993
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Abstract
Modern Eastern is what best describes this version. It is a mixture of all the styles and revisions that emerged throughout the nineteenth century. Aside from this, new features were included to suit the modern form of the literature, such as that in orthography. Patterns in pretonic and posttonic vowels are used to describe these features. Orthography and phonology had a somewhat conservative alteration in this version, due to the minimal amount of spellings that were replaced or totally changed, such as those leaning towards Southeastern Yiddish. There was to a certain extent a reorganization and reconstruction of the stressed vowel system that adapted and conformed to the Southeastern dialect, the origin of the author.
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