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There must be a representation for the morpheme that contains the allomorphs /son/ and /sn-/ in Russian. The problem is how to represent it. We can't represent it as SON, since 'O' has two allophones: ...
If two allophones were to meet at random in the street, Canada's enormous linguistic diversity (about 200 mother tongues) means it's statistically unlikely they could communicate in any language ...
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