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[…] there are cases where the order of morphemic segments in an utterance is free; i.e. the morphemes occur in any order, with no attendant difference in the larger contextual environment or in the social situation […]. Cases of this type will be referred to here as descriptively equivalent order. - Harris (1951), a pag.184, n.59 Descriptively equivalent order is comparable to free variants of one segment: 'books, papers', is substitutable for 'papers, books' before 'and magazines' in the same way that released [k] is for unreleased [k'] before juncture, or that /ekƏnamiks/ is for /iykƏnamiks/ […]. - Harris (1951), a pag.185, n.60
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