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Topic: <b>Affricate<



  
 The Affricates
These phoneme sequences could be considered affricates; in English, however, they occur only in syllable-final position and are thus considered as allophones of a plosive plus a fricative.
The affricates are the only example of a stop plus fricative combination which can occur in syllable-initial position in English.
Perhaps the most obvious distinction between the fricative component of the affricates and the corresponding fricatives /S/ and /Z/ is the increased asymmetry of the frication rectangle, probably caused by the passage from the plosive: in the affricates there is often a bulge in the lower frequency portions of the fricative part.
http://cslu.cse.ogi.edu/tutordemos/SpectrogramReading/cse551html/cse551/node40.html

  
 Lojban - TheBestLinks.com - ASCII, Artificial language, Affricate, Cartesian coordinate system, ...
Lojban, ASCII, Artificial language, Affricate, Cartesian coordinate system...
Lojban - TheBestLinks.com - ASCII, Artificial language, Affricate, Cartesian coordinate system,...
Two frequent combinations are the affricates tc [tS] and dj [dZ], which represent one sound (phoneme) each in English but are considered a combination of two phonemes in Lojban.
http://www.thebestlinks.com/Lojban.html

  
 hist1.htm
change of a glide to an affricate in word initial position
segmental simplification of an affricate to a fricative
http://nersp.nerdc.ufl.edu/~irenem/hist1.htm

  
 The Tower of Babel
On the other hand, in West Caucasian languages the opposition in palatalization between affricates is usual, and one has to mark it carefully.
‰´º - voiceless (aspirated) palatalized labialized hushing affricate
‰´:º - tense (unaspirated) palatalized labialized hushing affricate
http://starling.rinet.ru/Texts/pref1.htm

  
 Acoustic analysis of singleton and geminate affricates in Italian
In Table IV, it is possible to see that error percentages for affricates are worse compared to those obtained for other classes of consonants.
For affricates, it was found that the average difference between singles and geminates in terms of V1d is 38 ms (»-25% for geminates), in C1d is 51 ms (»+62%for geminates), in C2d is 27 ms (»+28% for geminates) while considering the whole consonant Cd=C1d+C2d the difference is 78ms (»+44% for geminates).
The best result is obtained using C1d/V1d but, if we consider specific consonants, the result is even better (for example, with C1d/V1d there are no mistakes for [ʤ] and with Cd there is only one mistake (percentage error 4.63%) for [ʧ]).
http://www.essex.ac.uk/web-sls/papers/01-01/submission.htm   (3460 words)

  
 ipswebhome
Affricate: A consonant sound produced with a complete closure between two articulators and with velic closure preventing air escaping via the nasal cavity.
In many languages one (or more) syllables in a word are produced louder and longer than others.
An example from English: the word ten which is /ten/ in most environments may become /tem/ if the following word begins with a bilabial consonant, as for example in the phrase ten books, which may be pronounced /tem bUks/.
http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/johnm/ips/ipsweb_glossary.htm   (5447 words)

  
 Speech Group Achievements 2001
With 12 cues, the overall classification score between stops and fricative or affricate consonant is close to 100%.
In addition, the aspirated consonant /h/ is compared with fricatives and affricates in order to assess the capability of differentiating frication and aspiration.
Stridency of the fricatives and affricates can also be classified very well with 8 cues.
http://web.mit.edu/speech/www/2001achieve.html   (3796 words)

  
 GroMye2000.html
For example, at the end of a word followed immediately by another word (i.e., in the word-final, nonprepausal position) only 36% of the occurrences of /t/ in their data (N=363) were complete, consisting of both a closure and a burst.
In fact, when the stop consonant /t/ arrives in the working memory, at least five list chunks that are themselves words -- ATE, RAY, GRAY, RATE, and GREAT -- can be assumed to be in active competition to establish a resonance with the phonemic codes in working memory.
As items become rapidly activated by their partially compressed auditory codes, they are stored in a working memory that preserves them on a slower time scale, even as they activate list chunks.
http://www.cns.bu.edu/Profiles/Grossberg/GroMye00.html   (17879 words)

  
 Syllable structure
An example of the affricate /ts/ is above in the word /si.tsi.ka/ for ‘another’ and an example of the affricate /ks/ is in the word /a.wak.ksis/ for ‘chewing gum’.
Most languages consider /ts/ as common affricate but similar findings for /ks/ have not been found across languages.
Most all consonants found in the Blackfoot language (please refer to the section on Blackfoot sounds) can occupy the onset position except for a few, which are /h/, /w/, and /y/.
http://www.fp.ucalgary.ca/howed/syllable_structure.htm   (1097 words)

  
 Hexapedia - List of linguistic topics
D dangling modifier - dative case - decipherment - declension - defective verb - descriptive linguistics - dental consonant - derivation - determiner - diacritic - diaeresis - dialect- dictionary - diphthong- discourse - dislocation - double acute accent - dual grammatical number
B back-formation - backronym - bilabial consonant - breathy voice- breve
N naming - nasal consonant - natural language - natural language processing - natural language understanding - neologism - neurolinguistics - nominative case - noun - noun phrase - null morpheme
http://www.hexafind.com/encyclopedia/List_of_linguistic_topics   (471 words)

  
 affricate --  Encyclopædia Britannica
Sometimes the affricates ch and j are also considered as sibilants.
Examples of affricates are the ch sound in English chair, which may be represented phonetically as a t sound followed by sh; the j in English jaw (a d followed by the zh sound heard in French...
Examples of affricates are the ch sound in English chair, which may be represented phonetically as a t sound followed by sh; the j in English jaw (a d followed by the zh sound heard in French&;
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9003919?tocId=9003919   (471 words)

  
 LINGUIST List 6.490: German Affricates
While phonemic affricates make good sense in many instances in many languages, there seems to be no reason to worry about whether there are phonetic affricates in *any* language -- even Spanish, where [s^] occurs only after [t].
Thus Spanish [ts^] must be analyzed as a unit affricate phoneme /c^/, since there is no [s^] otherwise in Castillian or American pronunciation.
I've been reading this discussion on German affricates with some puzzlement.
http://www.sfs.nphil.uni-tuebingen.de/linguist/issues/6/6-490.html   (471 words)

  
 Ņaranis Grammar
The original consonant that should be used when the language is written is easy to determine.
Ņaranis uses what is known as a triconsonantal root system, in which three core consonants can be pulled out of nearly every word in the language.
Ideally, each rìnu'ah would have exactly one conjugation pattern that could be applied to any root.
http://www.thegreatsleep.com/serakus/language/naranis/grammar.html   (4689 words)

  
 hist1.htm
change of a glide to an affricate in word initial position
segmental simplification of an affricate to a fricative
vowel becomes nasalized when next to a nasal consonant
http://nersp.nerdc.ufl.edu/~irenem/hist1.htm   (1422 words)

  
 Speech perception in rats: Use of duration and rise time cues in labeling of affricate/fricative sounds.
The nonspeech continua were chosen so that if transfer occurred, it would indicate whether the animals had learned to use rise time or duration cues to differentiate affricates from fricatives.
The data from 9 of 10 rats indicated that rats can discriminate between these cues and do so in a similar manner to human subjects.
Transfer (without retraining) to analogous nonspeech continua was also tested.
http://seab.envmed.rochester.edu/abstracts/JeabAbstracts/80/_80-205.htm   (1422 words)

  
 Maya Symbol Set Information
c# (ch) alveopalatal affricate, as in the onset of the word chair
A few consonants are represented by combining a letter with <#>:
The same type of logic involved in the choice of <#> instead of is relevant in these cases: it is related to the nature of the ASCII codes.
http://maya.hum.sdu.dk/mayansymbols.html   (1422 words)

  
 Udi text - Sparrow's Deal
Special Codes: = voiceless uvular fricative; = voiced uvular fricative; = voiceless palatal affricate; = voiceless palatal fricative; = voiced palatal affricate>; = voiceless palato-alveolar fricative; vowel + <’> = pharyngealized vowel; consonantal stop/affricate + <’> = glottalized stop/affricate.
See the Udi Online Grammar for a description of Udi.
http://www.lrz-muenchen.de/~wschulze/choval.htm   (1422 words)

  
 Describing consonants
In a fricative consonant, the articulators involved in the constriction approach get close enough to each other to create a turbluent airstream.
Which consonant you're pronouncing depends on where in the vocal tract the constriction is and how narrow it is. It also depends on a few other things, such as whether the vocal folds are vibrating and whether air is flowing through the nose.
An affricate is a single sound composed of a stop portion and a fricative portion.
http://www.umanitoba.ca/linguistics/russell/phonetics/articulation/describing-consonants.html   (1759 words)

  
 HLW: Word Forms: Units (Printer-Friendly)
Spanish and Japanese also have stops and affricates at four different positions, and three of these are roughly the same as for English, but alveolar is replaced by dental place of articulation, that is, with the tongue tip against the upper teeth rather than against the alveolar ridge.
The voiceless postalveolar affricate is the first and last consonant in the word church; it is symbolized by /c/ in this book, so the pronunciation of church is written /c@rc/.
The voiceless fricative appears at the beginning and end of the word shush.
http://www.indiana.edu/~hlw/PhonUnits/pf2.html   (8515 words)

  
 Affricate consonant - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Affricates may also be contrasted by palatalization, as in the Erzya language, where voiceless alveolar, postalveolar and palatal affricates are contrasted.
Labialized, palatalized, velarized, and pharyngealized affricates also occur.
Affricates may also have phonemic length, that is, affected by a chroneme, as in Karelian.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Affricate_consonant   (8515 words)

  
 eng_33.htm
The "SKS" cluster begin with a simple "S" and then adds the "KS" affricate you just practiced.
Speakers from many languages fail to pronounce all stages consonant clusters.....combinations of two or more consonant clusters, at the ends of words.
Pay particular attention if your first language is Spanish, or any of the East Asian Languages.
http://andy.sut.ac.th/american/eng_33.htm   (531 words)

  
 Xu - UPSID Language Profile
segaff(n, [voiceless, aspirated, palato_alveolar, sibilant, affricate], [hindi_urdu, bengali, punjabi, e_armenian, osmanli, mongolian, korean, igbo, ga, swahili, kharia, khmer, sui, lungchow, taishan, burmese, lahu, haida, navaho, chipewyan, tolowa, mazahua, yana, tarascan, zuni, acoma, wiyot, dakota, yuchi, tunica, quechua, jaqaru, wapishana, amuesha, cofan, kota, gilyak, georgian, lak, burushaski, xu]).
segaff(n, [voiceless, palato_alveolar, sibilant, ejective, affricate], [e_armenian, zulu, tigre, amharic, dizi, haida, tlingit, navaho, chipewyan, tolowa, hupa, wintu, chontal, k7ekchi, mazahua, nootka, quileute, squamish, puget_sound, yana, shasta, zuni, acoma, dakota, yuchi, wappo, itonama, quechua, jaqaru, gununa_kena, georgian, lak, xu]).
segaff(n, [voiceless, aspirated, alveolar, sibilant, affricate], [beembe, sui, navaho, hupa, kwakw7ala, tarascan, jaqaru, amuesha, georgian, xu]).
http://www.langmaker.com/db/ups_xu.htm   (531 words)

  
 Kolagian Orthography
For example, few Kolagian languages use the phonetic sound represented as [c], a voiceless palatal stop, but many languages have a voiceless post-alveolar affricate, [ʧ].
In addition to the standards given in this document, the rules allow each language to have its own Modified Kolagian Orthography (MKO) to resolve problems specific to that language.
Previous versions of RKO used {thl} and {dhl} instead of the Icelandic letters {þ} and {ð}, and this may still be seen in the current romanization of Olaetyan, or in ASCII representations of RKO spelling.
http://www.io.com/~hmiller/lang/rko4.html   (787 words)

  
 Affricate consonant
The real English affricate phonemes and cannot have a morpheme boundary, and in order to show that they are not sequences of phonemes, they can be written with the ligatures or tie bars, or different characters and, avoiding the ambiguous and.
Affricates may also be contrasted by palatalization, as in the Erzya language, where voiceless alveolar, postalveolar and palatal affricates are contrasted.
Affricate consonants begin like stops (most often an alveovelar, such as or) and that doesn't have a release of its own, but opens directly into a fricative such as or (or, in one language, into a trill).
http://www.worldhistory.com/wiki/A/Affricate-consonant.htm   (532 words)

  
 Oriental Name Construction for Authors of Fantasy
This is an aspirated voiceless blade-palatal (or retroflex) affricate, as in 'CHILLY'.
This is an unaspirated voicelss blade-palatal (or retroflex) affricate, like 'J' in 'JELLY'.
This is an unaspirated voiceless front-palatal affricate, like 'G' in 'GENIUS'.
http://modzer0.cs.uaf.edu/~logan/names.html   (532 words)

  
 affricate - OneLook Dictionary Search
affricate : WordNet 1.7 Vocabulary Helper [home, info]
Tip: Click on the first link on a line below to go directly to a page where "affricate" is defined.
We found 17 dictionaries with English definitions that include the word affricate:
http://www.onelook.com/?w=affricate   (187 words)

  
 What is an ambiguous consonant sequence?
Here is a table of some kinds of ambiguous consonant sequences with an example of each:
An ambiguous consonant sequence is a phonetic string (segment or sequence) that may be interpreted as
This page is an extract from the LinguaLinks Library, Version 5.0 published on CD-ROM by SIL International, 2003.
http://www.sil.org/linguistics/GlossaryOfLinguisticTerms/WhatIsAnAmbiguousConsonantSequ.htm   (70 words)

  
 Introduction to Segmental Phonology: Sound Index
The following is an index of the postalveolar segments currently found in the feature database.
A short phonetic description is linked to a page with details about each segment.
http://www.linguistics.ucsb.edu/projects/featuresoftware/browse_sounds.php?soundset=14   (40 words)

  
 Talk:Affricate consonant - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The affricate is a fused morpheme that is a combination of the control suffix and a 1st/2nd person object suffix.
Generally in Uralic, /i/ and /j/ effect palatalization on a neighboring affricate, but sometimes the cause is deleted and effect remains, retaining the phonemic status that the deleted (semi)vowel held.
I say, either all three hypothetical voiced dorsal affricates should be listed, or none.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Affricate_consonant   (2158 words)

  
 Church Slavonic Pronunciation - Help Me Learn Church Slavonic
voiceless dental affricate; articulated with the tongue very low; hard consonant: the following vowel must be a back vowel regardless of how it is written
Does cause palatalization of a preceding neutral consonant (when is not in syllable initial position)?
preiotated ; preiotated in word-initial and after a vowel; can cause palatalization of a preceding neutral consonant when is not in syllable initial position
http://justin.zamora.com/slavonic/alphabet/pronunciation.html   (499 words)

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