[…] if the phonemic representation of speech is described as being one-one (7. 5), this does not mean that if a particular sound 'x' is associated with a phoneme 'Y', then when we are given the phoneme 'Y' we associated with it the original sound 'x'. - Harris (1951), a pag.5 Each element is identified with some features of speech in the language in question: for most of linguistic analysis the association is one-one (the features in question are associated only with element 'X', and element 'X' is associated only with the features in question) […] - Harris (1951), a pag.16
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