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Topic: Trill consonant


  
 Trill consonant
analyses, the trill [r] is not a separate...
word ends in a consonant or the penultimate...
MAGAZINES Linguistics: an interdisciplinary journal of the language sciences 7/1/2000 HALL, T. article analyzes consonant coalescence...
http://hallencyclopedia.com/Trill_consonant   (296 words)

  
 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:
http://www.tundria.com/Linguistics/pie-phonology.shtml   (816 words)

  
 Trill consonant - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A retroflex trill found in Toda has been transcribed [ɽ] (that is, the same as the retroflex flap), but might be less ambiguously written [ɽ͡r].
Epiglottal consonants are often allophonically trilled, and in some languages the trill is the primary realization of the consonant.
One other trill has been reported, an epiglottal trill.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trill_consonant   (370 words)

  
 wikien.info: Main_Page
Ejective consonants are a class of consonants which may contrast with aspirated or unaspirated consonants in a language.
They are often described as sounding like "spat" consonants, but ejectivity is often quite weak; in some contexts, and depending upon the language they appear in, they may even sound like unaspirated consonants.
The vast majority of ejective consonants noted in the world's languages are plosives or affricates.
http://www.alanaditescili.net/index.php?title=Ejective_consonant   (200 words)

  
 trill: Information From Answers.com
Listen to an example of a short passage ending on a trill.
For other uses of the word, see Trill (disambiguation)
These factors, together with the overall rate of the trill and whether that rate is constant or variable, can only be determined by considering the context in which the trill appears, and is usually to a large degree a matter of opinion with no single "right" way of executing the ornament.
http://www.answers.com/topic/trill-music   (541 words)

  
 Klingonska Akademien - pIqaD, And How to Read It.
While perhaps a bit far fetched, the unexplained characters might be instances of alphabetic characters from an earlier, and phonemically larger, form of the language, maintained either for historical purposes in affairs of state (I refer here to the trial scene in ST6), or more simply as decoration.
In phonology, the feature has played and important role in Chomsky and Halle's (1968) classification of the English vowels, the long vowels and diphthongs being called tense and the short vowels lax.
Consonant composed of initial stop phase followed by a release phase taking the form of a homorganic fricative.
http://www.klingonska.org/piqad   (5002 words)

  
 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)
http://www.justin.zamora.com/slavonic/alphabet/pronunciation.html   (499 words)

  
 Articles - Consonant
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.
This conception of consonants, however, does not reflect the modern linguistic understanding which defines consonants in terms of vocal tract constrictions.
http://gaple.com/articles/Consonant?mySession=d88b7190619c7d5d7110ebaac092...   (798 words)

  
 Fricative consonant - SmartyBrain Encyclopedia and Dictionary
Ubykh may be the language with the most fricatives, with 26.
This number actually outstrips the number of all consonants in English (which has 24 consonants).
On fricative phones and phonemes: Measuring the phonetic differences within and between languages (UCLA working papers in phonetics)
http://smartybrain.com/index.php/Fricative_consonant   (208 words)

  
 Hausa Consonants
Hausa has many words which contain geminate or "doubled" consonants.
In addition to speakers of some languages other than Hausa in Nigeria and Niger, the pronunciations of ky and gy described here are a feature typical of Ghanian Hausa, a variety of Hausa which has become the native language of numerous Ghanians.
Note the variation of the second consonant in the following words depending on the vowel which follows the consonant.
http://www.humnet.ucla.edu/humnet/aflang/Hausa/Pronunciation/consonants.html   (1239 words)

  
 ALVEOLAR TRILL FACTS AND INFORMATION
The alveolar trill is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages (such as,,, and).
Alveolar trills are common in Slavic languages like Russian and Polish, as well as Romance languages such as Spanish and Italian.
The voiceless alveolar trill also was most likely allophonic to its voiced counterpart in Ancient_Greek.
http://www.whereintheworldisbush.com/alveolar_trill   (289 words)

  
 Stop consonant - SmartyBrain Encyclopedia and Dictionary
Variability in apraxia of speech: a perceptual and VOT analysis of stop consonants.
Some languages have stops made with other mechanisms too: these are called ejective, implosive, or click dependent on the mechanism.
Aspects of stop consonant production by pediatric users of cochlear implants : An article from: Language, Speech & Hearing Services in Schools
http://smartybrain.com/index.php/Plosive_consonant   (354 words)

  
 Draseléq Grammar Sketch
Medial syllabic consonants are usually the product of two words being compounded relatively later in the development of the language.
In this environment, the trilled sound tends to become a flap,
The consonant phonemes in Draseléq, in the usual transliteration, are the following:
http://www.pueblacity.com/ego-pdf/ng/lng/draseleq/dgs_phon.html   (811 words)

  
 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
http://www.sungwh.freeserve.co.uk/sapienti/phon/ipasymb.htm   (1574 words)

  
 Taruven: sounds
All vowels can be long, the possible consonants are listed at the end of the consonant section.
Summarizing the possible shape of a Taruven syllable in terms of combinations of "C"'s and "V"'s, standing in for consonants and vowels respectively, is a somewhat daunting task, but (((C)C)C)V(V)(C), V being one or more vowels and/or long sounds, C being zero or more short sounds, is a start.
Since one might get three consonants in a row in a compound and Taruven only allows two consonants, it is necessary to simplify somehow.
http://home.nvg.org/~taliesin/taruven/sounds.html   (1186 words)

  
 SAMPA for German
The standard German consonant system is considered to have 17 or 19 obstruent phonemes (depending on whether two peripheral sounds are included, which occur only in loanwords), and five sonorants.
Orthographic is realised phonetically in a number of different ways:
The obstruents comprise six plosives, three (or four) affricates, and eight (or nine) fricatives, though there are two auditorily distinct fricatives (x and C) which are usually considered to be allophonic variants, giving ten fricatives in all that require distinct symbolic representation.
http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/sampa/german.htm   (512 words)

  
 Trill: Information From Answers.com
trill consonant, a type of sound used in some languages
This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title.
Trill, a sound made by a Maine Coon cat
http://www.answers.com/topic/trill-disambiguation   (135 words)

  
 Greek language
The main phonetic changes between Ancient and Modern Greek are a simplification in the vowel system and a change of some consonants to fricative values.
The consonants b, d, g became v, dh, gh (dh is /ð/ and gh is // and the new pronunciation of kh is /x/).
Note: [z] was an allophone of [s], used before voiced consonants, and in particular in the combination [zd] written as zeta (ζ).
http://www.infothis.com/find/Greek_language   (1736 words)

  
 Flap consonant - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
However, no language contrasts a tap and a flap at the same point of articulation, so the terms are used loosely.
(However, the latter may instead be a palatalized alveolar lateral flap.) These contrast with lateral approximants at the same positions, as well as a central retroflex flap [&;], alveolar trill [r], and alveolar approximant [&;].
In phonetics, a flap or tap is a type of consonantal sound, which is produced with a single contraction of the muscles so that one articulator is thrown against another.
http://www.peekskill.us/project/wikipedia/index.php/Flap_consonant   (489 words)

  
 Italian language
Italian has geminate, or double, consonants, which are distinguished by length.
Italian plosives are in general not aspirated, though they often are in English.
Length is distinctive for all consonants except for.
http://www.infothis.com/find/Italian_language   (1409 words)

  
 [No title]
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.
pulmonic posA1 posB1 posC0 plosive voiced # consonant, pulmonic, nasal, alveolar, voiced U n.
http://odur.let.rug.nl/~kleiweg/L04/Manuals/xstokens-example.txt   (1143 words)

  
 Trill consonant -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article
In (The branch of acoustics concerned with speech processes including its production and perception and acoustic analysis) phonetics, a trill is a (A speech sound that is not a vowel) consonantal sound produced by vibrations between the articulator and the (Click link for more info and facts about place of articulation) place of articulation.
Spanish as in perro is an (Click link for more info and facts about alveolar trill) alveolar trill.
(Click link for more info and facts about alveolar trill) alveolar trill
http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/encyclopedia/t/tr/trill_consonant.htm   (153 words)

  
 [No title]
E.g., [h] ¡ÉÉóŸ¨The Manner of Articulation - IŸ¨According to the manner of articulation consonants are usually classified as follows: Plosive: In the production of a plosive, there is a simultaneous oral and nasal closure.
It is based primarily on Roman Alphabet and a set of diacritics.
Nasal: A nasal is produced by a stricture of complete oral closure, but in this case there is no closure of nasal passage.
http://www.cse.iitb.ac.in/~nlp-ai/docs/ling_lect_03-1.ppt   (1076 words)

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