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| | HLW: Word Forms: Processes (Printer-Friendly) |
 | | So the next question we might ask is whether there are any constraints on which consonants and vowels can appear in which contexts or on which combinations of consonants or vowels occur in two-syllable words. |  | | This difference in intonation is similar to phonetic, rather than phonemic, differences at the level of consonants and vowels because it does not involve more distinctions made in one or the other accent. |  | | One very noticeable difference between English accents is in the details of how these dimensions interact with the structure and the meanings of sentences, that is, in their intonation. |
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http://www.indiana.edu/~hlw/PhonProcess/pf.html
(21147 words)
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| | Consonant - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | For example, in English, the sound [m] in "mud" is a consonant, but in "prism", it occupies an entire syllable, as a vowel would. |  | | The following tables list all the consonants listed by the IPA. |  | | Since the number of consonants in the world's languages is much greater than the number of consonant letters in most alphabets, linguists have devised systems such as the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) to assign a unique symbol to each possible consonant. |
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http://www.lexington-fayette.us/project/wikipedia/index.php/Consonant
(730 words)
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| | SpeechPathology.com: The Dynamics of Learning to Hear New Speech Sounds |
 | | In previous work that reported differences in phonetic perceptual learning as a function of speaker (e.g., Lively, et al., 1994), the task was to distinguish between two non-native speech sounds in a training set that, understandably, only included speakers of the non-native language. |  | | When the response was correct, a message to that effect appeared on the computer monitor and the next stimulus was presented. |  | | Although order effects are not typically evaluated in multidimensional scaling analyses based on difference ratings (Iverson & Kuhl, 1995, 1996), the MDS solutions in the present work showed substantial order effects. |
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http://www.speechpathology.com/Articles/arc_disp.asp?id=50
(10026 words)
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| | UW CogNeuro Lab: People |
 | | In the case of a suffix, as in this example, the final consonant of the root word is often the important thing. |  | | The example doesn't allow a really elegant solution using just 3 articulatory features. |  | | List the final consonants of each root word that takes a particular past-tense form, and then, for each root word, look up on the chart the 3 articulatory features associated with that consonant. |
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http://faculty.washington.edu/losterho/xAnspract.htm
(289 words)
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| | Describing consonants |
 | | In a fricative consonant, the articulators involved in the constriction approach get close enough to each other to create a turbluent airstream. |  | | Pay attention to what you are doing with your tongue when you say the first consonant of [lif] leaf. |  | | 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. |
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http://www.umanitoba.ca/linguistics/russell/138/2001/artic/describing-consonants.html
(1375 words)
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| | Nasal consonant - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | In the case of some Kru languages, for example, nasal consonants only occur before nasal vowels. |  | | When this is claimed, as with several of the Western Kru languages of Liberia, or the Pirahã language of the Amazon, nasal and non-nasal consonants usually alternate allophonically, and it is only a theoretical claim on the part of the individual linguist that the nasal version is not the basic form of the consonant. |  | | However, several of the Chimakuan, Salish, and Wakashan languages surrounding Puget Sound, such as Quileute, Lushootseed, and Makah, are truly without any nasalization at all, in consonants or vowels, except in special speech registers such as baby-talk or the archaic speech of mythological figures (and perhaps not even that in the case of Quileute). |
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http://www.newlenox.us/project/wikipedia/index.php/Nasal_consonant
(652 words)
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| | List of linguistic topics |
 | | naming - nasal consonant - natural language - natural language processing - natural language understanding - neologism - neurolinguistics - nominative case - noun - noun phrase - null morpheme |  | | umlaut - uninflected word - Universal grammar - uvular consonant |  | | false cognate - false friend - formal language - fricative consonant - function word - fusional language - future tense |
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http://www.worldhistory.com/wiki/L/List-of-linguistic-topics.htm
(505 words)
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| | Lateral consonant - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Such symbols are rare, but are becoming more common now that font-editing software has become accessible. |  | | Rarer lateral consonants include the retroflex laterals that can be found in most Indic languages; and the sound of Welsh ll, the voiceless alveolar lateral fricative [&;] that is also found in Zulu and many Native American languages. |  | | This page contains phonetic information in IPA, which may not display correctly in some browsers. |
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http://www.secaucus.us/project/wikipedia/index.php/Lateral_consonant
(512 words)
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| | Brendanletters |
 | | The first two are analogous to the core symbols of the consonants, and they represent rounded and unrounded vowels. |  | | All labial consonants in Iridian should theoretically be bilabial, but if you want to say them differently, that's your business and your accent. |  | | All the brendanletter alveolar consonants also occur in English,where they are written [n], [s], [z], [t], and [d]. |
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http://www.nhn.ou.edu/~bfurneau/iridian/letters.html
(4994 words)
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| | Church Slavonic Pronunciation - Help Me Learn Church Slavonic |
 | | 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 |  | | voiced bilabial stop, neutral consonant (may be palatalized or not, depending on the follwing vowel) |
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http://www.justin.zamora.com/slavonic/alphabet/pronunciation.html
(499 words)
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| | wikien.info: Main_Page |
 | | The descriptions below list positions where the obstruction may occur: |  | | In speech, consonants may have different places of articulation, generally with full or partial stoppage of the airstream. |  | | Spanish written "l" vs. "ll"; Hindi with dental, palatal, and retroflex laterals; and numerous Native American languages with not only lateral approximants, but also lateral fricatives and affricates. |
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http://www.alanaditescili.net/index.php?title=Place_of_articulation
(467 words)
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| | Zoque |
 | | For more information about metathesis in this language, click on the following links: |  | | A palatal glide + consonant sequence, due to morpheme concatenation, is pronounced with the glide following the consonant. |  | | When /y/ precedes an alveolar consonant /t/, /d/, /c/, /s/ or /n/, the alveolar consonant is palatalized |
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http://www.ling.ohio-state.edu/~mcarmstr/mirror/Zoque.html
(246 words)
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| | Alveolar consonant - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Nontheless, the symbols are frequently called 'alveolar', and the examples below are all alveolar. |  | | This page contains phonetic information in IPA, which may not display correctly in some browsers. |  | | The bare letters [s, t, n, l] etc may be assumed to be alveolar, but may also indicate that the language does not make such distinctions, and that two or more places are found allophonically. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alveolar_consonant
(342 words)
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| | Dental consonant - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | This page contains phonetic information in IPA, which may not display correctly in some browsers. |  | | Thus a good phonetic description of a language will specify whether coronal consonants are laminal or apical as well as whether they are dental or alveolar. |  | | However, they are actually alveolar, or perhaps denti-alveolar; the difference between the Romance languages and English is not so much where the tongue contacts the roof of the mouth, as which part of the tongue makes the contact. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dental_consonant
(375 words)
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| | A Guide To The IPA |
 | | This indicates that the consonant is aspirated: tʰ, dʰ. |  | | A consonant is a speech sound made by obstructing the air flow from the mouth in any way, e.g. |  | | Consonants are not only distinguished by where they are articulated, but how. |
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http://www.ultrasw.com/pawlowski/brendan/ipa.html
(4418 words)
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| | CONSONANT - Definition |
 | | All the consonants excepting the mutes may be indefinitely, prolonged in utterance without the help of a vowel, and even the mutes may be produced with an aspirate instead of a vocal explosion. |  | | All of them are sounds uttered through a closer position of the organs than that of a vowel proper, although the most open of them, as the semivowels and nasals, are capable of being used as if vowels, and forming syllables with other closer consonants, as in the English feeble (-b'l), taken (-k'n). |  | | That where much is given there shall be much required is a thing consonant with natural equity. |
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http://www.hyperdictionary.com/dictionary/consonant
(320 words)
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| | Ilya Writing |
 | | The written glyphs for consonants have a half- or full-circle basic structure, while vowels/semivowels have a quarter-circle basic structure. |  | | Sounds with more than one color band can be produced any of the indicated ways. |  | | The first division divides the right half into consonants, and the left half into vowels and semivowels (which includes true semivowels and approximants). |
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http://homepage.mac.com/pfhreak/ilya/writing/letters.html
(548 words)
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| | IPA Tables |
 | | These frictionless continuants are to be considered as consonants on account of their consequent lack of prominence as compared with the adjoining vowels.) |  | | Consonants which can be held on continuously without change of quality are sometimes classed together as contunatives or continuantsl they include nasal, lateral, rolled, fricative consonants and frictionless sounds. |  | | IPA Vowels : IPA Consonants : Other Symbols |
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http://www.sungwh.freeserve.co.uk/sapienti/phon/ipasymb.htm
(1574 words)
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| | Observing your articulators |
 | | You can see how far back the palato-alveolar place is compared to the alveolar place. |  | | Alveolars are different from palato-alveolars in that you can say an alveolar with your mouth wide open. |  | | A vowel or consonant is nasal if air comes out your nose when you make it. |
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http://www.unc.edu/~moreton/Materials/Observing.html
(2019 words)
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| | ALVEOLAR - Definition |
 | | {Alveolar processes}, the processes of the maxillary bones, containing the sockets of the teeth. |  | | (Phon.) Articulated with the tip of the tongue pressing against the alveolar processes of the upper front teeth. |  | | [n] a consonant articulated with the tip of the tongue near the gum ridge |
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http://www.hyperdictionary.com/dictionary/alveolar
(78 words)
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| | A: |
 | | Mark the words in which the consonant in the middle is voiced: |  | | Mark the words that end with a fricative: |  | | Mark the words that end with an affricative: |
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http://coral.lili.uni-bielefeld.de/Classes/Winter97/Begleit/phonex.html
(133 words)
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| | consonant: Information From Answers.com |
 | | affricate, affricate consonant, affricative — a composite speech sound consisting of a stop and a fricative articulated at the same point (as `ch' in `chair' and `j' in `joy') |  | | surd, voiceless consonant — a consonant produced without sound from the vocal cords |  | | stop consonant, stop, occlusive, plosive consonant, plosive speech sound, plosive — a consonant produced by stopping air at some point and suddenly releasing it |
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http://www.answers.com/topic/consonant-1
(204 words)
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| | wikien.info: Main_Page |
 | | The coronal consonants in English are all alveolar consonants: |  | | Coronal consonants are articulated with the tip or the front part of the tongue against the upper teeth, the upper gum (the alveolar ridge), or the part of the hard palate just behind it. |  | | The term covers a wide range of pronunciations, including dental, alveolar, and postalveolar consonants. |
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http://www.alanaditescili.net/index.php?title=Coronal_consonant
(85 words)
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| | Dental plans from 79 yr |
 | | We offer many dental care plans with many options on the types and amounts of coverage, so we are sure to have a dental plan that is right for you. |  | | alveolar consonant, dental consonant, alveolar, dental - a consonant articulated with the tip of the tongue near the gum ridge |
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http://www.ryckmans-far.org/dental_plans_from_79_yr.htm
(272 words)
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