Dental <b>consonant< - CompWisdom
About us  |  Why use us?  |  Press  |  Contact us

 

Topic: Dental <b>consonant<



  
 Language in India
(i)      Seven-fold classification of the place of articulation, viz., bilabial, labio-<b>dentalb>, <b>dentalb> or alveolar, retroflex, palatal, velar and glottal.
In this part distribution of consonants will be dealt with no consonant phonemes occurs in the final position.
Consonants normally do not occur in the final position of a word is particular characteristic of Kannada dialects.
http://www.languageinindia.com/oct2003/mysoredialect.html

  
 HLW: Word Forms: Processes (Printer-Friendly)
But notice that the change from an alveolar to a <b>dentalb> consonant should not interfere seriously with comprehension because the resulting sounds are quite similar to the original ones and because English has no <b>dentalb> stop or <b>dentalb> nasal phonemes that could be confused with the sounds that result.
The label on the arrow connecting the phoneme to its <b>dentalb> allophone means that that allophone is appropriate when the phoneme occurs before a <b>dentalb> consonant.
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.
http://www.indiana.edu/~hlw/PhonProcess/pf.html

  
 Interdental <b>dentalb> consonant
Consonant Harmony in Karaim Article by A. Nevins and B. Vaux analysing KAraim consonant harmony within the framework of Optimality Theory (PDF).
<b>Dentalb> Plans and <b>Dentalb> Coverage Offers information on low cost <b>dentalb> plans and how to choose one.
Mary's <b>Dentalb> Offers <b>dentalb> care for all ages with an emphasis in cosmetic <b>dentalb> care, <b>dentalb> reconstruction and <b>dentalb> restoration.
http://www.serebella.com/encyclopedia/article-Interdental_dental_consonant.html

  
 !Xóõ phonology
N and l are apical, whereas the rest of the <b>dentalb> and post-<b>dentalb> consonants are laminal.
U and o are somewhat centralized after a <b>dentalb> consonant and before a consonant.
Pharyngealized: cannot be preceded by x or an ejective or aspirated consonant
http://www.ultrasw.com/pawlowski/brendan/Xoo.html

  
 <b>Dentalb> consonant - encyclopedia article about <b>Dentalb> consonant.
Many phoneticians consider them be states of the glottis without a point of articulation as other consonants have.
Postalveolar Postalveolar consonants are consonants articulated with the tongue near or touching the back of the alveolar ridge, placing them a bit further back in the mouth than the alveolar consonants, which are at the ridge itself, but not as far back as the hard palate (the place of articulation for palatal consonants).
Alveolo-palatal In phonetics, alveolo-palatal (or alveopalatal) consonants are palatalized postalveolar fricatives, articulated with the blade of the tongue behind the alveolar ridge, and the body of the tongue raised toward the palate.
http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/dental%20consonant

  
 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.
http://www.hyperdictionary.com/dictionary/consonant

  
 <b>dentalb> care
Join with <b>dentalb> plans we provide now by selecting a program on this good internet page.
This is the one and only way to apply to with <b>dentalb> coverage plans.
We offer many <b>dentalb> care plans with many options on the types and amounts of coverage, so we are sure to have a <b>dentalb> plan that is right for you.
http://www.zibouworld.com/dental_care.htm

  
 Rules of Sandhi
Any consonant --except Nasals, Semivowels and Sibilants-- is changed to the first of its class, when followed by a hard consonant (this is "mainly" a kind of complement to the 2nd sub-rule of the second rule of Consonant Sandhi; go to the 4th rule for more specific information about changes in Sibilants).
This sub-rule is a complement to the 5th Rule of Consonant Sandhi.
The consonant "s" belonging to either a Substitute (i.e., when "s" is intended to be substituted in order to form inflected forms) or a Termination is obligatorily changed to "s" when preceded by a Vowel (except "a" and "aa"), a Semivowel, a Guttural or "h".
http://www.sanskrit-sanscrito.com.ar/english/essentials/sandhirules.html

  
 Encyclopedia4U - Lateral consonant - Encyclopedia Article
Most commonly the tip of the tongue makes contact with the upper teeth (see: <b>dentalb> consonant) or the upper gum (the alveolar ridge) just behind the teeth (see: alveolar consonant).
Rarer lateral consonants include the sound of Welsh ll, which is a voiceless lateral fricative, and the retroflex laterals as can be found in most Hindustani languages.
in several native language families of North America and aboriginal Australian ones) have whole systems of several different lateral fricatives and affricates in their consonant inventories.
http://www.encyclopedia4u.com/l/lateral-consonant.html

  
 <b>dentalb> consonant - definition of <b>dentalb> consonant by the Free Online Dictionary, Thesaurus and Encyclopedia.
<b>dentalb> consonant - definition of <b>dentalb> consonant by the Free Online Dictionary, Thesaurus and Encyclopedia.
<b>dentalb> consonant - a consonant articulated with the tip of the tongue near the gum ridge
consonant - a speech sound that is not a vowel
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/dental%20consonant

  
 Appendix: Changeless Speech
'W' generally represents the rounded back semivowel, but when combined with a consonant or liquid, indicates that the consonant or liquid is to be pronounced with the lips tightly rounded.
Although the glyph for this phoneme appears to have two forms that mirror each other, the second appears only as an often silent closing consonant.
A variant of this closing form without the underdot was sometimes used after the glyphs for 'BH', 'DH', 'GH', 'GH
http://members.aol.com/booksnikon/apndxcon.htm

  
 Joonas Pulkkinen: Associations between craniofacial morphology, <b>dentalb> consonant articulation and velopharyngeal function in cleft lip/palate
Associations between craniofacial morphology, <b>dentalb> consonant articulation and velopharyngeal function in cleft lip/palate
Joonas Pulkkinen: Associations between craniofacial morphology, <b>dentalb> consonant articulation and velopharyngeal function in cleft lip/palate
You may download, display and print it for Your own personal use.
http://ethesis.helsinki.fi/julkaisut/laa/kliin/vk/pulkkinen

  
 list.html
Laitinen J, Haapanen M-L, Paaso M, Pulkkinen J, Heliövaara A, Ranta R. Occurrence of <b>dentalb> consonant misarticulations in different cleft types.
Laitinen J, Ranta R, Pulkkinen J, Paaso M, Haapanen M-L. Changes in Finnish <b>dentalb> consonant articulation in cleft lip/palate children between 6 and 8 years of age.
Laitinen J, Ranta R, Pulkkinen J, Haapanen M-L. The association between <b>dentalb> arch dimensions and occurrence of Finnish <b>dentalb> consonant misarticulations in cleft lip/palate children.
http://ethesis.helsinki.fi/julkaisut/laa/hamma/vk/laitinen/list.html

  
 dentalconsonant - definition of dentalconsonant by the Free Online Dictionary, Thesaurus and Encyclopedia.
<b>Dentalb> Society of the State of New York
Word not found in the Dictionary and Encyclopedia.
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/dentalconsonant

  
 <b>Dentalb> consonant at opensource encyclopedia
Dentals are consonants articulated with either the lower or the upper teeth, or both.
"<b>Dentalb> consonant" in world wide web people finder »
In French, Italian, and Spanish t, d, n, and l are all <b>dentalb>, whereas they're alveolar in English.
http://wiki.tatet.org/Dental.html

  
 Dalbor's Voice Files
/l/ to <b>dentalb> [l ̹] before a <b>dentalb> consonant:
http://www.auburn.edu/forlang/Spanish/FLSP0501/sppron27-02.htm

  
 ALVEOLAR - Definition
[n] a consonant articulated with the tip of the tongue near the gum ridge
[adj] pertaining to the alveolar ridge; "alveolar consonant"
http://www.hyperdictionary.com/dictionary/alveolar

  
 Acoustic consonant reduction
The latter could result in, for example, palatalization of fricatives and plosives (Byrd, 1994), or a lack of distinction between alveolar and labio-<b>dentalb> consonants due to incomplete or inappropriate closure.
The former would result in blurring the borders between, for example, vowel-like consonants and vowels, or fricatives and plosives.
For the consonant sonorants, the center of gravity is dominated by the damping of the higher frequencies due to their closed articulation.
http://fonsg3.let.uva.nl/Proceedings/Proceedings_19/ConsonantRed_RvS/Consonantreduction.html   (3275 words)

  
 HLW: Word Forms: Processes (Printer-Friendly)
But notice that the change from an alveolar to a <b>dentalb> consonant should not interfere seriously with comprehension because the resulting sounds are quite similar to the original ones and because English has no <b>dentalb> stop or <b>dentalb> nasal phonemes that could be confused with the sounds that result.
(I'm assuming the alveolar prounciation is the prototypical articulation for /t/ because it's the most common place of articulation for this consonant.) You would have to slide your tongue forward from the alveolar ridge to the upper teeth as you go from the /t/ to the <b>dentalb> fricative /&part;/ in the.
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.
http://www.indiana.edu/~hlw/PhonProcess/pf.html   (21147 words)

  
 Click consonant - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Clicks appear more stop-like or more affricate-like depending on their place of articulation: Clicks involving an apical alveolar or laminal postalveolar closure are acoustically abrupt and sharp like plain stops, while bilabial, <b>dentalb> and lateral clicks have a longer and acoustically noisier sounds that are more like affricates.
Thus a "nasal <b>dentalb> click" means a click with a <b>dentalb> anterior articulation/release and a velar-nasal posterior articulation/accompaniment.
There is ongoing discussion as to which other clicks are best analysed as consonant clusters, as in several cases this is not obvious.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Click_consonant   (1726 words)

  
 SpeechPathology.com: The Dynamics of Learning to Hear New Speech Sounds
The consonant was either /d/ or /d/ and the vowels were those in ''hot'', ''heat'', ''hoot'' and ''hut.'' Hindi speakers were instructed in the production of the alveolar stop, and AE speakers were instructed in the production of the <b>dentalb> stop.
No alveolar productions were used that were not judged to be acceptable exemplars by AE speakers, and no <b>dentalb> productions were included that were not judged acceptable by H speakers.
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.
http://www.speechpathology.com/Articles/arc_disp.asp?id=50   (10026 words)

  
 HLW: Word Forms: Processes: Assimilation
But notice that the change from an alveolar to a <b>dentalb> consonant should not interfere seriously with comprehension because the resulting sounds are quite similar to the original ones and because English has no <b>dentalb> stop or <b>dentalb> nasal phonemes that could be confused with the sounds that result.
The label on the arrow connecting the phoneme to its <b>dentalb> allophone means that that allophone is appropriate when the phoneme occurs before a <b>dentalb> consonant.
But it's easy to see why this is so: they are always followed by a <b>dentalb> fricative.
http://www.indiana.edu/~hlw/PhonProcess/assimilation.html   (10026 words)

  
 Phonetics
phonemes myPhoneticAlphabet { "p" => <consonant #voiceless #bilabial #plosive> "b" => <consonant #voiced #bilabial #plosive> "t" => <consonant #voiceless #<b>dentalb> #plosive> "d" => <consonant #voiced #<b>dentalb> #plosive>}
By default, Languid uses the International Phonetic Alphabet, where each consonant and vowel implement the feature structures defined above.
position { bilabial, labiodental, <b>dentalb>, alveolar, postalveolar, retroflex, palatal, velar, uvular, pharyngeal, glottal, epiglottal, dental_alveolar, alveolo_palatal, labial_velar, labial_palatal };
http://lonestar.texas.net/~jebbo/conlang/phonetics.htm   (301 words)

  
 Abstracts
Kugu-Uwanh, a two-laminal language, contrasts ‘heterorganic’ laminal clusters with homorganic ones at both the <b>dentalb> and alveopalatal positions.
Consonants articulated with the blade of the tongue (laminals) in Australian Aboriginal languages come in two (at least) varieties: those with <b>dentalb> or interdental closure (th, nh) and those with alveopalatal closure (ñ, c).
A language of the last of these types is the Warburton Ranges (WR) dialect of Western Desert (Douglas 1964), in which the alveopalatals occur intervocalically before i and after a heterorganic consonant, and the dentals occur elsewhere.
http://www.hum.ku.dk/ichl2003/abstracts/section7.html   (1259 words)

  
 Kosi grammar - FrathWiki
Word-initially, it is syllabic when followed by any consonant, and when word-finally, it is syllabic when preceded by any consonant.
Word-initially, it is syllabic when followed by any consonant, and word-finally, it is syllabic when preceded by any consonant.
It may be pronounced as voiceless and velar before another consonant, but not all speakers of Kosi use said pronunciation.
http://wiki.frath.net/Kosi_grammar   (2796 words)

  
 voiced_alveolo-palatal_fricative
Voiced alveolo-palatal fricative Voiced bilabial fricative Voiced bilabial implosive Voiced bilabial plosive Voiced consonant Voiced <b>dentalb> fricative Voiced <b>dentalb> implosive Voiced <b>dentalb> plosive Voiced...
Voiced alveolo-palatal fricative   Voiced bilabial fricative   Voiced <b>dentalb> fricative   Voiced <b>dentalb> plosive  Voiced epiglottal fricative   Voiced glottal fricative   Voiced labiodental fricative   Voiced...
voiceless alveolo-palatal fricative s 115, 92 voiced alveolo-palatal fricative z 122, 92 alveolar lateral flap l 108, 92 simultaneous and x x 120, 92 tie bar kp ts _ 95 Dafydd Gibbon, Wed Aug 9 11:26:42 CEST...
http://voiced_alveolo-palatal_fricative.networklive.org   (2796 words)

  
 Important information on <b>dentalb> consonant
Find the latest resources and information on <b>dentalb> consonant on our website now.
lastplacechamps.com, your online resource for information, news, and resource for <b>dentalb> consonant.
dentalconsonant, geminate, guttural, guttural consonant, labial, labial consonant, letter, letter of the alphabet, occlusive, phone, plosive, plosive consonant, plosive speech sound, sibilant,...
http://lastplacechamps.com/find/dental-consonant.aspx   (187 words)

  
 Interdental consonant
Interdental consonants may be transcribed with both a subscript and a superscript bridge, as [n̪͆], if precision is required, but it is more common to transcribe them as advanced alveolars, for example [n̟].
The most commonly occurring interdental consonants are the non-sibilant fricatives (sibilants may be <b>dentalb>, but do not appear as interdentals).
This differs from a <b>dentalb> consonant in that the tip of the tongue is placed between the upper and lower front teeth, and therefore may articulate with both the upper and lower incisors, while a <b>dentalb> consonant is articulated with the tongue against the back of the upper incisors.
http://parkforest.info/?title=Interdental_consonant   (300 words)

  
 Interdental consonant : Interdental consonant
The most commonly occurring interdental consonants appear to be interdental non-sibilant fricatives.
Interdental consonants do not appear to contrast with <b>dentalb> consonants.
This differs from a <b>dentalb> consonant in that the tip of the tongue is placed between the upper and lower front teeth, and therefore may articulate with both the upper and lower incisors, while a <b>dentalb> consonant is articulated with the tongue against the back of the front incisors.
http://www.gogeeky.net/title/interdental-consonant   (255 words)

  
 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 <b>dentalb> plosive rather than as a fricative).
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.
It was therefor assumed that the absence of a closure in the vocal tract meant the elision of /k/.
http://www.essex.ac.uk/web-sls/papers/96-01/96-01.html   (1834 words)

Compwisdom
 About us   |  Why use us?   |  Press   |  Contact us

 Copyright © 2006 CompWisdom.com Usage implies agreement with terms.