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| Â | PLM 2004: Hamann and Zygis |
 | | Speech Production and Language: In Honor of Osamu Fujimura. |  | | Firstly, we posit that the so-called postalveolars [ |  | | Secondly, we show that the palatalized variants of the retroflexes, which occur in Polish foreign words, are not retroflex but palatalized postalveolars, i.e. |
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http://elex.amu.edu.pl/ifa/plm/abstracts/plm_2004_abs_hamann_zygis.htm
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| Â | [No title] |
 | | Another way to explain this asymmetry between high and mid vowels with respect to coronal transfer is to say that we opt for more optimal perceptual distance between adjacent segments. |  | | Interestingly, the high front vowel i in addition loses its input [coronal] specification, gives it up entirely to the preceding velar, and therefore turns into a high mid vowel ( in the output. |  | | I assume the following feature specifications of the relevant segments: (51) Feature representations high front vowel i: [coronal, dorsal] high mid vowel (: [dorsal] mid front vowel e: [coronal, dorsal, pharyngeal] velars: [dorsal] postalveolars: [dorsal, coronal] Assuming these featural representations, palatalization involves the following mappings: (52) Mappings in First Velar Palatalization a. |
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http://roa.rutgers.edu/files/239-0198/roa-239-lubowicz-1.doc
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| Â | The International Phonetic Alphabet |
 | | An empty square means that the sound is (presumably) possible, but no symbol has been defined (because no language uses it, or because it is just as convenient to use diacritics over an existing symbol). |  | | The vowels' table attempts to map the vowel symbols. |  | | However, there is much variability, both between languages and within certain languages, in the articulation of this segment. |
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http://www.eleves.ens.fr:8080/home/madore/misc/linguistic/ipa
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| Â | Abstract Review |
 | | Japanese consonant system possesses a contrast of palatalization, where /s, z/ can be considered as non-palatalized alveolar fricatives and the voiced and unvoiced 8216;postalveolars’; as palatalized alveolar fricatives. |  | | In our data, French is the language that showed most inter-subject variations in the realization of the postalveolar. |  | | To summarize, first, we observed a tendency of more extensive inter-individual variations for posterior voiceless sibilants in the languages having only one (Japanese and French) than in those having two (Chinese and Swedish). |
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http://www.maccs.mq.edu.au/events/2003/issp2003/titlesab.html?abid=27
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| Â | SID A |
 | | An ambisyllabic consonant is one which is regarded as being simultaneously the final consonant in the coda of one syllable and the initial consonant of the onset of the following syllable. |  | | One suggestion is that they are palatalised postalveolars. |  | | It is not clear what the specification for the traditional labels palato-alveolar or alveolo-palatal should be in terms of this feature. |
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http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/johnm/sid/sida.htm
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| Â | Curiosities of the Polish spelling |
 | | The 5 postalveolar sounds are spelt in three ways, depending on their position: |  | | Since we have the special letters æ, ñ, ¶, ¼, they should be used with more consequence, independently of their position. |  | | The threefold writing of the postalveolars (see pt. |
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http://grzegorj.w.interia.pl/gram/isoen/osobl.html
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| Â | Talk:Rhotic consonant - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | This now obsolete IPA symbol is included in the Unicode (U+027C, or 636 in decimal) and looks like a long-legged r (ɼ). |  | | Makeshift combinations of r with IPA diacritics are used by some authors, but perhaps the simplest solution would be to accept the Czech letter as a legal IPA symbol. |  | | This page was last modified 17:33, 6 Nov 2004. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Rhotic_consonant
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| Â | Place of Articulation |
 | | Many insist that palato-alveolar and alveo(lo)-palatal are two different things -- though they don't agree which is which. |  | | The active articulator may be either the tongue tip or (usually) the tongue blade -- diacritic symbols can be used if it matters which. |  | | Linguists have traditionally used very inconsistent terminology in referring to the postalveolar POA. |
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http://www.umanitoba.ca/faculties/arts/linguistics/russell/138/sec3/poa-big.htm
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| Â | [No title] |
 | | Dental fricatives, however, do not have such an additional obstacle for the airstream. |  | | Still, we need to have some additional features. |  | | Dentals and alveolars are thus [+anterior], postalveolars and palatals are [-anterior]. |
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http://staff-www.uni-marburg.de/~uffmann/features.doc
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| Â | IPA Zounds Manual |
 | | Covers high vowels and postalveolars, palatals and velars. |
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http://zounds.artefact.org.nz/docs/manual.html
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| Â | LINGUIST archives -- April 1995, week 1 (#17) |
 | | In other words, the change takes place before bilabials, labio-dentals, dentals, postalveolars and velars but not before palatals. |  | | I'm searching for a plausible articulatory phonetic reason why the diphthongization of /a:/ to /ao/ would be blocked by a following palatal consonant like /y/ or /n~/ and nothing else. |
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http://lloyd.emich.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A2=ind9504a&L=linguist&D=1&F=&S=&P=2175
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| Â | Polish Course – Lesson 6 |
 | | Also other dentals (affricates, fricatives) may change their row depending on the next alveolar or postalveolar. |  | | You should avoid such assimilations of alveolars or postalveolars even if you thought the group is impossible to pronounce. |  | | postalveolar + alveolar: je¼d¼cze ( [je¶æcze]), vocative form of je¼dziec. |
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http://grzegorj.w.interia.pl/kurs/06.html
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| Â | [No title] |
 | | Another use for the tie bar might be to show nasalized clicks, where the click articulation occurs simultaneously with a voiced velar nasal that uses a pulmonic air-stream, thus a nasalized postalveolar (retroflex) click [N_!A]. |  | | And postalveolars, sometimes known as palatoalveolars: [SA ZA]. |  | | You will notice that it has an affricated release. |
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http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/wells/iparecor.txt
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| Â | [No title] |
 | | As evidence for this, he repeatedly refers to a number of examples, in various of his works: Bulgarian 'schwa'; French velars, palatals and postalveolars; Danish t/d and d/ð. |  | | Make sure you understand the argument for relativism that he builds on these examples. |  | | Following de Saussure (and like Firth), Jakobson regarded linguistic items as deriving their identity from their contrasts with other items in a system. |
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http://www.phon.ox.ac.uk/%7Ejcoleman/lingtheory.htm
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| Â | Encyclopedia: Postalveolar consonant |
 | | Avoid confustion between alveolo-palatal fricatives (/ɕ/ and /ʑ/) and postalveolar ("palato-alveolar") fricatives (/ʃ/ and /ʒ/); these are not the same |
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http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Postalveolar-consonant
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| Â | Refactor English |
 | | We have k and g but interestingly no corresponding fricatives, which are the sounds that give German a bad name but only as far as I can tell because foreign speakers usually say them with more phlegm than is conceivably necessary. |  | | The former is very common; the latter less, which is odd because voiceless and voiced forms usually pair up, but definitely present in modern Greek among others. |  | | The main extra consonant is the verarized l in all (versus that in liquid), and maybe the postalveolars in ship and Asia. |
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http://www.c2.com/cgi-bin/wiki?RefactorEnglish
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| Â | OTS Bulletin Board -- Phonetics |
 | | 10.4 in the text it says that the blade of the tongue is lower in postalveolars than in alveolopalatals. |  | | 10.4 in the text it says > that the blade of the tongue is lower > in postalveolars than in alveolopalatals. |  | | But in the figure it looks likes the blade is higher in postalveolars. |
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http://ots.utoronto.ca/cgi/admin/users/LIN228-summer01/bb.cgi?read=50
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| Â | german symbols |
 | | postalveolar affricate English chair, picture, Spanish mucho, Italian cena, German Deutsche dZ voiced postalveolar affricate English gin, joy... |
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http://www.germanyresources.com/germany/german+symbols
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| Â | OTS Bulletin Board -- Phonetics |
 | | , in response to alveolo-palatals vs postalveolars, posted by Sofie on Saturday, 11 August 2001, at 4:24 p.m. |
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http://ots.utoronto.ca/cgi/admin/users/LIN228-summer01/bb.cgi?read=53
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| Â | HelpSpy: Lingua::Phonology::Symbols Help |
 | | # Postalveolars tS voiceless postalveolar stop dZ voiced postalveolar stop S voiceless postalveolar fricative Z voiced postalveolar fricative |
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http://helpspy.com/c.m/programming/lang/perl/cpan/c11/Lingua/Phonology/Symbols/
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| Â | Tutoring Service |
 | | The Linguistics Graduate Students Union is pleased to |  | | Please note that the hourly rate is $20.00. |  | | Are you perplexed about postalveolars, bewildered by benefactives, or |
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http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/linguistics/Tutoring_Service.htm
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| Â | pharyngitis |
 | | Postalveolars]] Palatals Velars Uvulars Pharyngeals Glottals Stops or affricates p b t d ts dz tS dZ c J k g q G\\ ? |
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http://www.cytos.org/pharyngitis.html
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