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| | Asymmetries of Floating Affixes |
 | | We also show that given the appropriate context, labialization in Chaha entails palatalization and that simultaneity of labialization and palatalization has nothing to do with the morphological features of the impersonal, i.e. |  | | For example, a comparison of the two words in (1) shows that only in the impersonal, (1b), the stem-initial consonant is labialized and the stem-final consonant is palatalized. |  | | This constraint triggers phonemic decomposition by which [labial] and [palatal] become autonomous so that [labial] yields labialization whereas [palatal] yields palatalization. |
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http://www.er.uqam.ca/nobel/asymet/conferences/2001/resumes01/degif.htm
(534 words)
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| | [No title] |
 | | It is more important to parse the object mropheme than to align it with the edge, since the feature will move away to find an appropriate place to dock. |  | | In this case it is better to fail to parse the feature (42c) rather than to violate ALIGN (42b). |  | | In theory the round feature could project its own vowel but is kept from doing so by the highly ranked *STRUC (s). |
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http://roa.rutgers.edu/files/29-1094/roa-29-zoll-1.doc
(5122 words)
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| | Assignment 4 |
 | | for palatalization and the assimilating environment (so,high front vowel for palatalized, for example, and rounded vowel for labialized). |  | | Provide one example of each such environment using new symbols introduced in chapter 10, not occurring in English. |  | | However, it can’t include a segment which is already labial for labialization or palatal for palatalization. |
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http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~nrosen/homework4.html
(319 words)
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| | ROUNDEDNESS FACTS AND INFORMATION |
 | | For example, in the Athabaskan language, voiceless velar fricatives distinguish three degrees of labialization, transcribed either or. |  | | It is not known how this might relate to the labialization distinction in Hupa. |  | | The northern Iroquoian languages have no labial consonants. |
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http://www.gamestupid.com/Roundedness
(343 words)
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| | Centum-Satem isogloss |
 | | Brugmann terms the Centum languages "languages with labialization" or "u̯-languages" and the Satem languages "languages without labialization", and he opines that |  | | For words and groups of words, which do not appear in any language with labialized velar-sound, [the "pure velars"] it must for the present be left undecided whether they ever had the u̯-afterclap. |  | | More specifically, in the sense of Brugmann's "languages with labialization", the Centum group includes Italic, Celtic, Germanic, Greek, and possibly a number of minor and little known extinct groups (such as Venetic and the ancient Macedonian language and probably the Illyrian languages). |
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http://www.radiousa.org/wiki/index.php?title=Centum
(1197 words)
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| | Bottleneck on ClearCase database ? |
 | | I would like to compare our labialization timing with other clearcase user. |  | | This test should not be performed on a production system but it shows an improvement. |  | | With multiples threads, i could not get more than 32 labels/s and per VOB even if there are 4 CPUs. |
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http://cmcrossroads.com/boards/showflat-Number-39112-page-1-view-expan-sb-...
(1822 words)
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| | PPT Slide |
 | | Some languages make lexical contrasts with presence / absence of labialization on consonants |  | | English [SW] is usually made with labialization, but there is no contrastive such as /S/ vs. /SW/. |  | | Labialization: rounding and (usually) protrusion of the lips. |
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http://trill.berkeley.edu/PhonLab/classes/ling110/PowerPoint/sec/tsld003.htm
(38 words)
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| | Glossary |
 | | Said of a vowel that contrasts with a tenser (more constricted) version. |  | | The European languages like English or Spanish don't have any; some African languages are particularly rich in ingressives. |  | | The effect is similar to pronouncing the given consonant and w simultaneously. |
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http://www.angelfire.com/scifi2/nyh/glossary.html
(4857 words)
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| | Labialisation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | For example, in the Athabaskan language Hupa, voiceless velar fricatives distinguish three degrees of labialization, transcribed either [x x̹ xʷ] or [x x̜ʷ xʷ]. |  | | This appears to have been the case in Ubykh and Eastern Arrernte, for example. |  | | With non-dorsal consonants, labialization prototypically involves velarization as well, so it might more accurately be called labiovelarization. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Labialisation
(537 words)
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| | Secondary articulation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | For example, the voiceless labialized velar plosive [kʷ] has only a single stop articulation, velar [k], with a simultaneous [w]-like rounding of the lips, and is usually heard as a kind of [k]. |  | | For this reason, the IPA symbols for labialization and palatalization were for a time placed directly under the consonant (as [k̫] and [ƫ]), and there is still an alternate symbol for velarization or pharyngealizaton that is superposed across the consonant (as in [ɫ] for dark L). |  | | The most frequently encountered are labialization (such as [kʷ]), palatalization (such as the Russian "soft" consonant [tʲ]), velarization (such as the English "dark" L [lˠ]), and pharyngealization (such as the Arabic "emphatic" consonant [tˤ]). |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secondary_articulation
(250 words)
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| | Proto-Drem Phonological History |
 | | Then later as the CVCV was broken, the CVC+VC as a possible suffix are a possibility. |  | | The Labialization was almost considered a dialect change, as the change happened later on in Northern Migration and to a greater degree. |  | | Palatals occurred frequently due to the presence of the high vowels in that preceded a lot of the consonants in Proto-Migration. |
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http://www.geocities.com/dremlangs/PDPhonoHist.htm
(833 words)
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| | Re: Pronunciation of "L' |
 | | >Of course, there are languages for which it appropriate to posit a set of >labialized consonants as unit phonemes, parallel with a set of >unlabialized.consonants True, but, as you have pointed out, French isn't one of them. |  | | >> >> The whole point of the w/{labialization} fiasco is that my using the >> {labialization} feature, which is part of the french /(whatever you want >to >> call it)/ phoneme to notate it rather than the [w] articulation so common. |  | | We were talking about 'oui,' where it's pretty obvious that one couldn't really use labialization, no matter if it was included in the phoneme: there's nothing to labialize. |
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http://www.usenet.com/newsgroups/sci.lang/msg00722.html
(318 words)
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| | Lookup L in Dictionary |
 | | The quality of being labial; as, the labialism of an articulation; conversion into a labial, as of a sound which is different in another language. |  | | One of the labial palpi of an insect. |  | | In a labial manner; with, or by means of, the lips. |
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http://www.bisforblog.com/dictionary.php?word=L
(925 words)
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| | Marjorie K.M. Chan: "A Response to Boltz' Notes on Cantonese Dentilabialization" |
 | | a/ 瓜 constitutes the only example of a low vowel which is preceded by a labialized consonant. |  | | Like the Zhongshan Shekki dialect today, the Sino-Portuguese data shows that labialization was preserved before low vowels at that time, reflecting either the speech of the transcriber only or eighteenth century Macao dialect in general. |  | | Ball's article shows a total loss of labialization in Macao in contrast to Shekki, the capital of Zhongshan district, where maintaining the distinction or merging the segments occurred in free variation. |
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http://people.cohums.ohio-state.edu/chan9/articles/jaos.htm
(1377 words)
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| | Rounding - KutjaraWiki |
 | | Consonants can also be rounded, although this is more usually referred to as labialization. |  | | Most languages only distinguish two lip positions: unrounded (pronounced with little lip movement) and rounded (pronounced with the lips squeezed together at the sides and opening wider in the centre, forming an "O" shape). |  | | The terms exolabial and endolabial are used to describe whether the inner or the outer surface of the lips are used for the rounding. |
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http://www.kutjara.com/wiki/index.php?title=Rounding
(214 words)
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| | John Weinstock |
 | | "Quantity and Labialization in the Nordic Languages: An Historical Interpretation." The Nordic Languages and Modern Linguistics/2, ed. |  | | "Quantity and Labialization in the Nordic Languages: An Historical Interpretation." Second International Conference of Nordic and General Linguistics, Umeå, Sweden, 1973. |  | | "On Scandinavian Labialization." Linguistic and Literary Studies in in Honor of Archibald A. Hill. |
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http://studentorgs.utexas.edu/flesa/gsc/weinstock.htm
(928 words)
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| | LINGUIST List 5.1031: New sound |
 | | The two releases, labial and dental, seem simultaneous, the air escaping through a rather narrow orifice, narrower than in the case of the labialized posteriors [i.e. |  | | Paul Roser referred me to the following sources, both of which further document [tp~]-like sounds in Caucasian languages: On Tue, 20 Sep 1994, Paul Kenneth Roser wrote: > J.C. Catford (1972) "Labialization in Caucasian Languages with > special reference to Abkhaz" in Proceedings of the 7th International > Congress of Phonetic Sciences. |  | | I leave it to you to judge how comparable it is to the Wari' case. |
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http://www.ling.ed.ac.uk/linguist/issues/5/5-1031.html
(447 words)
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| | [No title] |
 | | There is no palatalization present before the high front vowels [i] and [e], and no velarization (which is realized as labialization) before the back and low vowels [a], [o], and [u]. |  | | The data come from two sources: native speaker elicitation and a cassette tape which accompanies Foclir Pca (1990), the official Irish dictionary. |  | | When they are present, both palatalization and labialization seem not to be secondary articulations but rather full glides, based on duration (100-150 msc. |
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http://mambo.ucsc.edu/psl/ccrmas/199404/19940415.html
(924 words)
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| | FLE 128 |
 | | Meeting, course policy, expectations, assignment of the tasks; review of English sound system; problem sounds for Turkish L2 speakers of English |  | | 2- To work on secondary articulation particularly palatalization and labialization; |  | | Secondary articulation in English (palatalization and labialization); word stress |
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http://www.metu.edu.tr/~dtat/fle_1281.htm
(593 words)
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| | TITUS Is Testing Unicode Scriptmanagement |
 | | GEORGIAN LETTER TAR WITH CAUCASIAN MODIFIER LETTER LABIALIZATION MARKER |  | | GEORGIAN LETTER CHIN WITH CAUCASIAN MODIFIER LETTER PRERUPTIVE MARKER AND PALATALIZATION MARKER |  | | GEORGIAN LETTER CAN WITH ACUTE ABOVE RIGHT AND CAUCASIAN MODIFIER LETTER LABIALIZATION MARKER |
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http://titus.uni-frankfurt.de/unicode/unicsel/geor/georkomb.htm
(1656 words)
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