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Part of the gross acoustic features are indifferent (non distinctive), and only a part are connected with meanings essential to communication (distinctive) [...] - Bloomfield (1935), a pag.77 The features of sound in any utterance, as they might be recorded in the laboratory, are the 'gross acoustic features' of this utterance. - Bloomfield (1935), a pag.77 [...] gross acoustic features, which, as we have seen form a continuous whole and can be subdivided into any desired number of parts. - Bloomfield (1935), a pag.78
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