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| | Voiceless Plosives |
 | | In voiceless plosives, it occurs after /s/ and in unstressed syllable-initial position. |  | | English has many examples of two or more contiguous plosives; they may occur in the same word or across word boundaries. |  | | This multiple personality of the plosives is responsible for the two different names which are traditionally used for this phoneme category: the term stop refers to the first or silence phase, while the term plosive refers to the second or explosive phase. |
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http://cslu.cse.ogi.edu/tutordemos/SpectrogramReading/cse551html/cse551/node36.html
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| | The International Phonetic Alphabet |
 | | One sequence commonly found in many languages is the succession of a plosive by the corresponding fricative. |  | | Present participles ending in ‘ng’ are pronounced with a plain velar nasal, as is (consequently) the word “singer”, whereas in the words “finger” or “English”, the ‘ng” combination is a velar nasal followed by a velar plosive. |  | | The release is usually the most audible part of the plosive, and it is for this reason that final plosives tend to vanish, especially voiceless ones (their release is suppressed, and then the entire plosive is reduced to very little). |
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http://www.madore.org/~david/misc/linguistic/ipa
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| | IPDS Kiel, Unveröffentlichtes - Kohler 1999, Plosive-related glottalization phenomena in read and spontaneous speech |
 | | independence of plosive-related glottalization phenomena from position in prosodic phrase; but in R 2/3 plosives, in S 2/3 glottalization phenomena in both positions: greater degree of plosive reduction in S vs. R. |  | | in complete nasal context of (1) breathy-voiced or voiceless nasals instead of plosives also possible, breathy-voiced especially for lenis |  | | Plosive and vowel-related glottalization and phrase-final laryngealization in "achtzehnten Oktober", Kiel Corpus of Spontaneous Speech, g083a003 KAK, male speaker; speech wave, spectrogram, and SAMPA labels |
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http://www.ipds.uni-kiel.de/pub_exx/kongrbtr/plosglot.html
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| | The International Phonetic Alphabet |
 | | Present participles ending in ‘ng’ are pronounced with a plain velar nasal, as is (consequently) the word “singer”, whereas in the words “finger” or “English”, the ‘ng” combination is a velar nasal followed by a velar plosive. |  | | One sequence commonly found in many languages is the succession of a plosive by the corresponding fricative. |  | | epiglottal ” column in the consonants table because there is no reason not to do so (there are as many symbols in the epiglottal as in the glottal locations, and it is interesting to parallel the pharyngeal, epiglottal and glottal consonants), and similarly an “implosives” row. |
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http://www.madore.org/~david/misc/linguistic/ipa
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| | Introduction to Segmental Phonology: Sound Index |
 | | The following is an index of the plosive segments currently found in the feature database. |  | | A short phonetic description is linked to a page with details about each segment. |
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http://www.linguistics.ucsb.edu/projects/featuresoftware/browse_sounds?soundset=21
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| | The Elision of /k/ in <nk# C> Context |
 | | A further 31 phrases had to be taken out of the experiment because in these phrases the initial consonant following a final /k/ was a plosive or /ð/ (which is usually pronounced as a lax dental plosive rather than as a fricative). |  | | Sometimes the first plosive is simply replaced by a glottal stop, but quite often both plosives are audible in speech. |  | | It could well be the case that /k/ is hardly ever elided in this environment, but there might be instances where this elision does not result in an unacceptable pronunciation. |
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http://www.essex.ac.uk/web-sls/papers/96-01/96-01.html
(1834 words)
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| | Voiceless Plosives |
 | | In voiceless plosives, it occurs after /s/ and in unstressed syllable-initial position. |  | | English has many examples of two or more contiguous plosives; they may occur in the same word or across word boundaries. |  | | This multiple personality of the plosives is responsible for the two different names which are traditionally used for this phoneme category: the term stop refers to the first or silence phase, while the term plosive refers to the second or explosive phase. |
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http://cslu.cse.ogi.edu/tutordemos/SpectrogramReading/cse551html/cse551/node36.html
(1834 words)
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| | Voiceless Plosives |
 | | In voiceless plosives, it occurs after /s/ and in unstressed syllable-initial position. |  | | English has many examples of two or more contiguous plosives; they may occur in the same word or across word boundaries. |  | | This multiple personality of the plosives is responsible for the two different names which are traditionally used for this phoneme category: the term stop refers to the first or silence phase, while the term plosive refers to the second or explosive phase. |
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http://cslu.cse.ogi.edu/tutordemos/SpectrogramReading/cse551html/cse551/node36.html
(1317 words)
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| | Voiceless Plosives |
 | | In voiceless plosives, it occurs after /s/ and in unstressed syllable-initial position. |  | | English has many examples of two or more contiguous plosives; they may occur in the same word or across word boundaries. |  | | This multiple personality of the plosives is responsible for the two different names which are traditionally used for this phoneme category: the term stop refers to the first or silence phase, while the term plosive refers to the second or explosive phase. |
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http://cslu.cse.ogi.edu/tutordemos/SpectrogramReading/cse551html/cse551/node36.html
(1317 words)
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| | The International Phonetic Alphabet |
 | | One sequence commonly found in many languages is the succession of a plosive by the corresponding fricative. |  | | Present participles ending in ‘ng’ are pronounced with a plain velar nasal, as is (consequently) the word “singer”, whereas in the words “finger” or “English”, the ‘ng” combination is a velar nasal followed by a velar plosive. |  | | Compared to the dental sound, the tongue is further back, and further raised: the blade of the tongue and the alveolar ridge form a narrow passage for the flow of air, in which turbulence is heard. |
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http://www.madore.org/~david/misc/linguistic/ipa
(1317 words)
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| | Free plosive download: download plosive game |
 | | Related games by keywords: jigsaw, puzzle, plosive, crea, soft, x-plosive, crea-soft,
|  | | Soft-Album.com - Free downloads of any software you need |  | | Showing plosive games from 1 to 1 of 1 |
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http://www.gamealbum.com/keyword/plosive
(1317 words)
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| | Voiced Plosives |
 | | The trouble starts where a voiceless plosive is not aspirated in an environment where we would expect it to be aspirated, or where voiced plosives have more aspiration than normal. |  | | So, once you know the context, you should not have too much trouble distinguishing between the allophonically unaspirated voiceless plosives and the normally unaspirated voiced plosives, because voiceless plosives become unaspirated in predictable environments, environments in which the voiced plosives cannot occur. |  | | Voiceless plosives become unaspirated in word-final position, due mainly to laziness, or possibly a shortage of breath! |
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http://cslu.cse.ogi.edu/tutordemos/SpectrogramReading/cse551html/cse551/node37.html
(822 words)
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| | Voiceless Plosives |
 | | In voiceless plosives, it occurs after /s/ and in unstressed syllable-initial position. |  | | English has many examples of two or more contiguous plosives; they may occur in the same word or across word boundaries. |  | | This multiple personality of the plosives is responsible for the two different names which are traditionally used for this phoneme category: the term stop refers to the first or silence phase, while the term plosive refers to the second or explosive phase. |
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http://cslu.cse.ogi.edu/tutordemos/SpectrogramReading/cse551html/cse551/node36.html
(822 words)
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| | The International Phonetic Alphabet |
 | | One sequence commonly found in many languages is the succession of a plosive by the corresponding fricative. |  | | Present participles ending in ‘ng’ are pronounced with a plain velar nasal, as is (consequently) the word “singer”, whereas in the words “finger” or “English”, the ‘ng” combination is a velar nasal followed by a velar plosive. |  | | If the plosive is the first phone pronounced, then there is no attack: if the plosive is voiced, it starts with a vibration of the vocal cords, and if it is voiceless it simply starts with the release. |
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http://www.eleves.ens.fr:8080/home/madore/misc/linguistic/ipa
(7060 words)
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| | Voiceless Uvular Plosive [Definition] |
 | | Voiceless Uvular Plosive information on Wikimirror.com - read below for information on Voiceless Uvular Plosive. |  | | The voiceless uvular plosive is a type of consonantal A consonant is a sound in spoken language that is characterized by a constriction or closure at one or more points along the vocal tract. |  | | Glottal consonants in the International Phonetic Alphabet: Note: The glottal stop occurs in many languages. |
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http://www.wikimirror.com/Voiceless_uvular_plosive
(7060 words)
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| | The International Phonetic Alphabet |
 | | One sequence commonly found in many languages is the succession of a plosive by the corresponding fricative. |  | | Present participles ending in ‘ng’ are pronounced with a plain velar nasal, as is (consequently) the word “singer”, whereas in the words “finger” or “English”, the ‘ng” combination is a velar nasal followed by a velar plosive. |  | | If the plosive is the first phone pronounced, then there is no attack: if the plosive is voiced, it starts with a vibration of the vocal cords, and if it is voiceless it simply starts with the release. |
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http://www.madore.org/~david/misc/linguistic/ipa
(7060 words)
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|
| |
| | The International Phonetic Alphabet |
 | | One sequence commonly found in many languages is the succession of a plosive by the corresponding fricative. |  | | Present participles ending in ‘ng’ are pronounced with a plain velar nasal, as is (consequently) the word “singer”, whereas in the words “finger” or “English”, the ‘ng” combination is a velar nasal followed by a velar plosive. |  | | The release is usually the most audible part of the plosive, and it is for this reason that final plosives tend to vanish, especially voiceless ones (their release is suppressed, and then the entire plosive is reduced to very little). |
|
http://www.madore.org/~david/misc/linguistic/ipa
(7060 words)
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|
| |
| | The International Phonetic Alphabet |
 | | One sequence commonly found in many languages is the succession of a plosive by the corresponding fricative. |  | | Present participles ending in ‘ng’ are pronounced with a plain velar nasal, as is (consequently) the word “singer”, whereas in the words “finger” or “English”, the ‘ng” combination is a velar nasal followed by a velar plosive. |  | | The release is usually the most audible part of the plosive, and it is for this reason that final plosives tend to vanish, especially voiceless ones (their release is suppressed, and then the entire plosive is reduced to very little). |
|
http://www.madore.org/~david/misc/linguistic/ipa
(7060 words)
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|
| |
| | The International Phonetic Alphabet |
 | | One sequence commonly found in many languages is the succession of a plosive by the corresponding fricative. |  | | Present participles ending in ‘ng’ are pronounced with a plain velar nasal, as is (consequently) the word “singer”, whereas in the words “finger” or “English”, the ‘ng” combination is a velar nasal followed by a velar plosive. |  | | The release is usually the most audible part of the plosive, and it is for this reason that final plosives tend to vanish, especially voiceless ones (their release is suppressed, and then the entire plosive is reduced to very little). |
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http://www.madore.org/~david/misc/linguistic/ipa
(7060 words)
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| | dusingoct17.doc |
 | | A vowel preceded by an aspirated plosive is shorter than the same vowel proceeded by an unaspirated plosive. |  | | An aspirated plosive is longer than an unaspirated plosive. |  | | Also in rule-based synthesis these vowel- and closure-duration features are successfully applied to improve quality and intelligibility [33]. |
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http://www.colips.org/conference/cocosda2003/proceedings/dusingoct17.doc
(1784 words)
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| | The Pedia - Plosive |
 | | not analyzed into sequences of plosive plus nasal stop... |
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http://thepedia.com/define/Plosive
(27 words)
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| | The Pedia - Plosive |
 | | not analyzed into sequences of plosive plus nasal stop... |
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http://thepedia.com/define/Plosive
(27 words)
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| | The Pedia - Plosive |
 | | not analyzed into sequences of plosive plus nasal stop... |
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http://thepedia.com/define/Plosive
(27 words)
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| | Allwords.com Definition of plosive |
 | | Your Query of 'plosive' Resulted in 1 Matches |  | | A plosive consonant or sound, such as, etc. |  | | Said of a consonant: made by the sudden release of breath after stoppage. |
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http://www.allwords.com/word-plosive.html
(27 words)
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| | The Pedia - Plosive |
 | | not analyzed into sequences of plosive plus nasal stop... |
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http://thepedia.com/define/Plosive
(27 words)
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| | The Pedia - Plosive |
 | | not analyzed into sequences of plosive plus nasal stop... |
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http://thepedia.com/define/Plosive
(27 words)
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| | LINGUIST List 7.838: Uvular affricate |
 | | One last example is Wolof in Senegal which has a uvular fricative that has an affricate allophone (word initial I believe). |  | | :::::: HOBERMAN :::::: A uvular affricate could be a good solution to a problem in the historical development of Old Aramaic, but I wouldn't even think of that solution if there were no uvular affricates in living languages. |  | | The Language Atlas (Schweizerdeutscher Sprachatlas) does not refer to the uvular affricate but only to the velar one. |
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http://www.ling.ed.ac.uk/linguist/issues/7/7-838.html
(27 words)
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| | Podcast.net - The Podcast Directory |
 | | Plosive - Neutral - 09 - Everythings Everything |  | | Plosive - Neutral - 03 - Informal Fireworks |  | | Plosive - Neutral - 02 - Pavlovian Fear |
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http://www.podcast.net/show/10870
(27 words)
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| | Bulgarian language - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The hard and the palatalized consonants are considered separate phonemes in Bulgarian. |  | | Bulgarian has a total of 33 consonant phonemes (see table below). |  | | During the palatalization of most hard consonants (the bilabial, labiodental and alveolar ones), the middle part of the tongue is lifted towards the palatum resulting in the formation of a second articulatory centre whereby the specific palatal "clang" of the soft consonants is achieved. |
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http://www.butte-silverbow.us/project/wikipedia/index.php/Bulgarian_language
(2871 words)
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