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| | Tamilweb: Words and their Pronunciation |
 | | The nasal consonants ந, ன, ண, ங and ம are pronounced variously based on the environment in which they occur. |  | | However, the consonant ண that occurs at the end of words is doubled and an enunciative vowelஉ is added in spoken Tamil. |  | | The nasal consonants that occur at the end of words are usually nasalized by the preceding vowels. |
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http://lrrc3.sas.upenn.edu/tamilonline/tamilwords.asp
(746 words)
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| | Fricative consonant |
 | | Articulatory complexity, ambient frequency, and functional load as predictors of consonant development in children. |  | | Ubykh may be the language with the most fricatives, with 26. |  | | Fricative consonants are produced by forcing air through a narrow channel made by placing two articulators close together (e.g. |
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http://hallencyclopedia.com/Fricative_consonant
(450 words)
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| | Proto-Indo-European Phonology |
 | | Different linguists have developed different sets of "laryngeals", while some have stuck to algebraic formulations, claiming that it is not possible to reconstruct the exact nature of these consonants. |  | | Voiced stops occurred in somewhat more restricted environments than voiceless stops: they did not normally occur before other stops or fricatives (except across morpheme boundaries, where they may have developed by forward assimilation to another voiced consonant). |  | | Some examples, next to the different possible consonants: |
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http://www.tundria.com/Linguistics/pie-phonology.shtml
(816 words)
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| | Phonetics |
 | | By default, Languid uses the International Phonetic Alphabet, where each consonant and vowel implement the feature structures defined above. |  | | The code fragment below shows the built-in feature structure assumed for consonants. |  | | This is defined by a library file and a user-defined feature structure can be implemented by modifying this file. |
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http://lonestar.texas.net/~jebbo/conlang/phonetics.htm
(301 words)
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| | A Contrastive Analysis of Hindi and Malayalam |
 | | Thus in the initial position when stop is the first member, the second member can be trill, <b>lateralb>, fricative or semivowel and when fricative is the first constituent stop, nasal, <b>lateralb>, trill, fricative or semivowel can occur as the second constituent in both the languages. |  | | The major patterns found in the initial two consonant clusters are stop+ trill, stop+ <b>lateralb>, nasal+ semivowel, fricative+ stop, fricative+ nasal, fricative+ <b>lateralb>, fricative+ trill, fricative+ semivowel, semivowel+ trill, semi-vowel + semivowel in both Malayalam and Hindi. |  | | The retroflex voiced <b>lateralb> /L/ and the palatal voiced <b>lateralb> /ļ / in Malayalam have no equivalence in Hindi. |
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http://www.languageinindia.com/sep2002/chap2.html
(4776 words)
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| | Huron language |
 | | The measurements were compared to the data available on palatal glides and laterals as described in section 2.3 and then they were used to synthesize the sounds thus eliminating the surface noise of the wax cylinder recordings and restoring a part of their acoustic quality. |  | | But the transitions of a palatal <b>lateralb> may be a little longer because it is articulated with the tongue body, a rather big organ. |  | | (5) mention that the F2 of a <b>lateralb> may vary between 840 and contains no more than 40 Huron words, and only a few of them can give information on the phoneme that is the object of our study. |
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http://ossossane.org/langue2.html
(1835 words)
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| | <b>Lateralb> consonant - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Rarer <b>lateralb> consonants include the retroflex laterals that can be found in most Indic languages; and the sound of Welsh ll, the voiceless alveolar <b>lateralb> fricative[ɬ] that is also found in Zulu and many Native American languages. |  | | Laterals are "L"-like consonants pronounced with an occlusion made somewhere along the axis of the tongue, while air from the lungs escapes at one side or both sides of the tongue. |  | | The symbol for the alveolar <b>lateralb> flap is the basis for the expected symbol for the retroflex <b>lateralb> flap: |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lateral_consonant
(604 words)
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| | User talk:Hippietrail - Wiktionary |
 | | (By the way, there is a diacritic indicating that a consonant is syllabic. |  | | OED: uses parantheses for the linking R, consonants which "may or may not be heard in the context", and around a Schwa before /l/, /m/, and /n/ to show "that these consonants are often syllabic in the words concerned" |  | | The Advanced Learner's Dictionary of Current English: uses italicization for sounds which may be omitted (ie consonants and Schwa), and an asterisk for the linking R. Some Webster's dictionary (Webster's Third New International Dictionary, or so) which had strange conventions and didn't use the IPA. |
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http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/User_talk:Hippietrail
(11917 words)
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| | <b>Lateralb> consonant - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Rarer <b>lateralb> consonants include the retroflex laterals that can be found in most Indic languages; and the sound of Welsh ll, the voiceless alveolar <b>lateralb> fricative[ɬ] that is also found in Zulu and many Native American languages. |  | | Laterals are "L"-like consonants pronounced with an occlusion made somewhere along the axis of the tongue, while air from the lungs escapes at one side or both sides of the tongue. |  | | The symbol for the alveolar <b>lateralb> flap is the basis for the expected symbol for the retroflex <b>lateralb> flap: |
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http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lateral_approximant_consonant
(604 words)
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| | Search Encyclopedia.com |
 | | It is a usual symbol for a <b>lateralb> consonant, as in the English <b>lateralb>. |  | | A principal problem was to fix the vowels, as the Hebrew alphabet has only consonants. |  | | It is pronounced as a consonant in English and often as a y in other languages, as in the Hebrew hallelujah. |
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http://www.encyclopedia.com/search.asp?target=Consonant&rc=10&fh=5&fr=11
(472 words)
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| | Consonants |
 | | The /l/ in 'lango' = tongue is a <b>lateralb> consonant in the sense that the tongue blocks the oral cavity in the middle but allows air to flow out on one or both sides. |  | | We classify the consonants by 1) where the obstuction occurs, 2) the degree of closure produced by the obstruction, 3) whether the nasal passages are open or closed, 4) the constrast between voicing and nonvoicing, and 5) other factors. |  | | Generally consonants exist in pairs; one member of the pair is voiced and other is unvoiced. |
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http://www.owlnet.rice.edu/~wies301/Consonants.html
(1590 words)
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| | Baseball Toaster : The Griddle : December 2005 |
 | | All the laterals need to be computed up to the point of the fumble. |  | | Because the video showed the pass went Henne to Avant to Breaston to Manningham to Avant who lateraled back to a lineman (I believe it was #54 Mark Bihl) who couldn't handle it (or chose not to) and then Hart picked it up and then lateraled to Ecker. |  | | If Ecker had scored, there would have been the problem of what about all the extra players on the field. |
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http://griddle.baseballtoaster.com/archives/2005_12.html
(8828 words)
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| | Hebrew alphabet |
 | | Because of cognates with other Semitic languages, this phoneme is known to have originally been a <b>lateralb> consonant, most likely IPA the fricative /&;/ (as in Welsh /ll/) or the affricate /tɬ/ (as in Náhuatl /tl/). |  | | Israeli: y, i (in final positions or before consonants) |  | | Historically, the consonants ב bêṯ, ג gímel, ד dāleṯ, כ kāp̄, פ pê, and ת tāw each have two sounds: one hard (plosive consonant), and one soft (fricative consonant), depending on the position of the letter and other factors. |
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http://www.free-download-soft.com/info/hebrew-alphabet.html
(1438 words)
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| | The Aiola Alphabet |
 | | All the other symbols represent consonants of the language. |  | | Four consonant sounds are represented in written speech with diagraphs (two-letter symbol). |
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http://www.aiola.org/learn/alphabet.html
(99 words)
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| | I. Overview and Summary |
 | | Consonant with its new mandate, this staff should be separated from the NIC and made a National Intelligence Evaluation Council (NIEC) in its own right. |  | | Twenty years later, the costs of such a system are also apparent: a rapid turnover in membership and in some senior staff, diluting the capabilities of the Committee. |  | | This appears to be the logical group to charge with the broader types of evaluation responsibilities noted above. |
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http://www.globalsecurity.org/intell/library/congress/1996_rpt/ic21/ic21001.htm
(15704 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. |  | | With consonant pairs, the first is unvoiced (no vocal cord vibration), the second is voiced, said exactly the same way, but with the vocal cords vibrating. |  | | Bilabial Consonant, where the sound is produced by the motion of the lips. |
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http://homepage.mac.com/pfhreak/ilya/writing/letters.html
(548 words)
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| | Old_English_language |
 | | are allophones of respectively, occurring between vowels or voiced consonants. |  | | Doubled consonants are geminated; the geminate fricativesðð/þþ, ff and ss cannot be voiced. |  | | This is not because they stopped existing: regional dialects continued even after that time to this day, as evidenced both by the existence of middle and modern English dialects later on, and by common sense – people do not spontaneously develop new accents when there is a sudden change of political power. |
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http://mindwallet.com/wiki/Old_English_language
(2455 words)
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| | <b>lateralb> meniscus |
 | | See Anatomical terms of location <b>lateralb> consonant s a <b>lateralb> pass in American football |  | | The term " <b>lateralb> " can refer to: an anatomical definition of direction. |  | | The knee contains a <b>lateralb> meniscus and a medial meniscus, and both are cartilaginous tissues that provide structural integrity to the knee when it undergoes tension and torsion. |
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http://www.33beat.com/lateral_meniscus.html
(238 words)
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| | <b>Lateralb> alveolar click - |
 | | The <b>lateralb> clicks are common in Khoisan languages and the neighboring Nguni languages (e.g. |  | | They are <b>lateralb> consonants, which means they are produced by allowing the airstream to flow over the sides of the tongue, rather than the middle of the tongue. |  | | In the case of the <b>lateralb> clicks, the release is noisy, like an affricate, rather than sharp like a plosive. |
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http://psychcentral.com/wiki/Lateral_alveolar_click
(464 words)
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| | 2pSP30 Attributes of <b>lateralb> consonants. |
 | | When a <b>lateralb> consonant is produced adjacent to a vowel, there is a rapid change in the acoustic spectrum as these attributes appear or disappear. |  | | The common acoustic attributes associated with the <b>lateralb> configuration appear to be used in different ways by listeners depending on the context. |  | | The attributes that distinguish a syllabic <b>lateralb> and a nonlow back vowel /o/ have been examined through acoustic analyses and through perceptual experiments in which F2 bandwidth and other properties are manipulated in synthetic utterances. |
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http://www.auditory.org/asamtgs/asa94mit/2pSP/2pSP30.html
(194 words)
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| | Central consonant |
 | | A consonant in which air flows along the sides of the tongue rather than over its center is a <b>lateralb> consonant. |  | | Examples of central consonants are the voiceless velar plosive (the "k" in the English word "skin"), the voiced alveolar fricative (the "z" in the English word "zoo") and the alveolar nasal (the "n" in the English word "plan"). |  | | A central'' or medial consonant is a consonant sound that is produced when air flows across the center of the mouth over the tongue. |
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http://www.keywordmage.net/ce/central-consonant.html
(96 words)
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| | <b>lateralb> -- Encyclopædia Britannica |
 | | This conical shape may be modified by <b>lateralb> eruptions, as in the case... |  | | a <b>lateralb>, or sideways, deviation of the spine usually including two curvesthe original abnormal curve and a later developing compensatory curve; possible causes include asymmetrical development of back, chest, or abdominal musculature, significant difference in the lengths of the legs, and malformation or disease of the spinal column and associated structures;... |  | | The sounds at the beginning and end of the word lull are laterals in most forms of American English. |
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http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9047276?tocId=9047276
(679 words)
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| | <b>Lateralb> undulation Definition / <b>Lateralb> undulation Research |
 | | <b>Lateralb> undulation is the most primitive of vertebrate locomotor patterns, present even in hagfish, lampreys, and lancelets. |  | | <b>lateralb> undulation is the most appropriate description of. |  | | <b>Lateralb> undulation is the most primitive of vertebrate Vertebrata is a subphylum of chordates, specifically, those with backbones or spinal columns. |
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http://www.elresearch.com/Lateral_undulation
(255 words)
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| | <b>Lateralb> - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | This is a disambiguation page: a list of articles associated with the same title. |  | | <b>lateralb> thinking (a term invented by Edward de Bono) |  | | Look up <b>lateralb> in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lateral
(98 words)
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| | xstokens-example.txt |
 | | pulmonic posA1 posB1 posC0 approximant voiced # consonant, pulmonic, <b>lateralb> approximant, alveolar, voiced U l. |  | | pulmonic posA0 posB0 posC0 nasal voiced # consonant, pulmonic, fricative, velar, voiceless U x. |  | | pulmonic posA1 posB1 posC0 fricative voiceless# consonant, pulmonic, fricative, alveolar, voiced U z. |
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http://odur.let.rug.nl/~kleiweg/L04/Manuals/xstokens-example.txt
(1143 words)
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| | Encyclopedia: R |
 | | In typography, there was once a form called the half r, which was lost before the long s was. |  | | In linguistics, guttural R (throaty R or French R) refers to pronunciation of the phoneme R as a guttural consonant. |  | | See rhotic consonant, r-colored vowel, and guttural R for discussion of the family of 'r' sounds. |
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http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/R%26B
(834 words)
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