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| | Voiced Plosives |
 | | The trouble starts where a voiceless plosive is not aspirated in an environment where we would expect it to be aspirated, or where voiced plosives have more aspiration than normal. |  | | So, once you know the context, you should not have too much trouble distinguishing between the allophonically unaspirated voiceless plosives and the normally unaspirated voiced plosives, because voiceless plosives become unaspirated in predictable environments, environments in which the voiced plosives cannot occur. |  | | Voiceless plosives become unaspirated in word-final position, due mainly to laziness, or possibly a shortage of breath! |
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http://cslu.cse.ogi.edu/tutordemos/SpectrogramReading/cse551html/cse551/node37.html
(822 words)
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| | The International Phonetic Alphabet |
 | | This is the voiced analog of the previous. |  | | One sequence commonly found in many languages is the succession of a plosive by the corresponding fricative. |  | | Present participles ending in ‘ng’ are pronounced with a plain velar nasal, as is (consequently) the word “singer”, whereas in the words “finger” or “English”, the ‘ng” combination is a velar nasal followed by a velar plosive. |
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http://www.eleves.ens.fr:8080/home/madore/misc/linguistic/ipa
(7060 words)
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| | The Affricates |
 | | These phoneme sequences could be considered affricates; in English, however, they occur only in syllable-final position and are thus considered as allophones of a plosive plus a fricative. |  | | See Figures 1 and 2 for examples of affricates. |  | | The phoneme sequences which the affricates most resemble are /th s/ and /d z/ which occur in the plural of nouns ending with alveolar plosives, such as ``bats'' or ``pods.'' In the spectrogram these endings show up as a brief plosive burst passing immediately into frication. |
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http://cslu.cse.ogi.edu/tutordemos/SpectrogramReading/cse551html/cse551/node40.html
(428 words)
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| | Encyclopedia: Voiced alveolar plosive |
 | | The Archi language of the Dagestani family has a voiceless velar lateral fricative that is clearly a fricated, although further forward than velars in many languages, and might better be called pre-velar. |  | | In speech there are different ways of producing a consonant. |  | | Phoneticians define phonation as use of the laryngeal system to generate an audible source of acoustic energy, i. |
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http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Voiced-alveolar-plosive
(3654 words)
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| | Introduction to Segmental Phonology: Sound Index |
 | | The following is an index of the alveolar segments currently found in the feature database. |  | | A short phonetic description is linked to a page with details about each segment. |
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http://www.linguistics.ucsb.edu/projects/featuresoftware/browse_sounds?soundset=13
(40 words)
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| | ips_pd_tutorial |
 | | However, when it is immediately preceded by a voiceless plosive, which in turn is in a position where it would be aspirated, the approximant is wholly or partially devoiced. |  | | We will use the English word printed as an example. |  | | Like all English approximants, it is voiced in most environments. |
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http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/johnm/ips/chapter8/ips_pd_tutorial.htm
(508 words)
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| | [No title] |
 | | If learners try too hard to articulate the sounds in this environment, they may create a problem where none exists. |  | | DEN-THEN: 58 pairs making 37 semantic contrasts Most languages have a close equivalent of the English voiced alveolar plosive /d/, but very few have an equivalent of the voiced dental fricative of then. |
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http://pages.britishlibrary.net/marlodge/wordlist/denthen.txt
(111 words)
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| | Phonology |
 | | For instance, the word "queen" is now almost universally pronounced as "kween" rather than with the original uvular plosive, so the symbol [q] has become redundant and might as well be otherwise employed. |  | | International communication is the need of the hour; anyone requiring phonemic accuracy may easily use another language. |  | | As can be seen from the above table, all the consonants apart from [j], [x] and [q] have values familiar through English usage, and [j] and [x] find confirmation in other European languages. |
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http://www.appledene.karoo.net/phonology.html
(893 words)
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| | japdev |
 | | This sensitive and selective nature of "vowel devoicing" might be interpreted as being "neural process" (Hirose 1971) rather than mere physical fluctuation. |  | | In the context of [velar plosive]+[V]+[palatoalveolar fricative], there appear to be formant-like patterns, but this is not the case when velar plosive is followed by other consonantal types. |  | | The inter-consonantal acoustic pattern for each word above was examined by using spectrograms generated by the xwaves package. |
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http://www.essex.ac.uk/web-sls/papers/97-02/97-02.html
(1169 words)
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| | sidv |
 | | Vowel A vocoid segment which occupies the nucleus of a syllable. |  | | For example, French voiced plosives usually have negative VOT and the voiceless ones zero VOT. |  | | Languages divide the VOT continuum in different ways to signal voicing. |
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http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/johnm/sid/sidv.htm
(549 words)
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| | plosive - OneLook Dictionary Search |
 | | plosive : WordNet 1.7 Vocabulary Helper [home, info] |  | | Tip: Click on the first link on a line below to go directly to a page where "plosive" is defined. |  | | We found 21 dictionaries with English definitions that include the word plosive: |
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http://www.onelook.com/?w=plosive&ls=a
(241 words)
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| | D - the free encyclopedia |
 | | Digraphs of D are rare in English, although other languages use DH or DD for a |  | | The letter D generally takes the voiced alveolar plosive value, IPA /d/ in most languages that use the Roman alphabet, including |  | | voiced dental fricative (some Celtic languages) or an aspirated voiced dental plosive (some Indo-Aryan languages), or use |
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http://www.encyclopedia-of-knowledge.com/?t=D
(432 words)
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| | X-plosive |
 | | X-plosive JigSaw Posted on: 2003-12-09 07:23:23 A truly realistic jigsaw puzzle game to download and play on your computer |  | | becomes G, the voiced uvular plosive G\, and the velarization diacriticsuccessive symbols by spaces: X-SAMPA symbol strings are uniquelycharacter set is not available, X-SAMPA will provide a workablecoding, which we can refer to as X-SAMPA (extended SAMPA). |  | | Perception of speech and sound in early infancy. |
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http://new.searcheverywhere.co.uk/search/for/X-plosive
(437 words)
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| | How to pronounce Hebrew |
 | | Voiced labiodental fricative v Note: Although the more logical choice would might been the voiced bilabial fricative (as Ancient Greek "beta"), this is not at all attested in Hebrew; all modern pronounciations have /v/ (except Babylonian which has aspirated /b/, but this seems borrowed, since no other Semitic languages use aspiration). |  | | Voiceless labiodental fricative f Although (as for beth) the more logical choice might have been the unvoiced bilabial fricative (as Ancient Greek "phi"), this is not at all attested in Hebrew; all modern pronounciations have /f/ (except Babylonian which has aspirated /p/, but this seems borrowed, since no other Semitic languages use aspiration). |  | | Voiced velar fricative gh The Yemenite "jimmel" seems a clear borrowing from Arabic, as no other Semitic languages have it, and it breaks the otherwise clear consistency of dagesh hazaq. |
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http://ir.iit.edu/~argamon/hebrew.html
(704 words)
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| | IPA Tables |
 | | In order to record the sounds of human speech, we must devise a method which is roughly independent of the usual spellings in languages. |  | | There is also another way to distinguish a voiced and voiceless sound. |  | | They are produced by varying the position of the tongue, and voicing the sounds which resonate in the area above the larynx and in the mouth. |
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http://www.sungwh.freeserve.co.uk/sapienti/phon/ipasymb.htm
(1574 words)
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| | Theiling Online: Fukhian |
 | | Adjectives are inflected for mode, which has two values: predicative or attributive, and for degree. |  | | In the same cluster as fricatives or plosives, they adjusts to their position. |  | | Depending on the voice of the cluster, they also devoice or become syllabic or both (depending on dialect). |
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http://www.theiling.de/conlang/s1
(1113 words)
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| | Red Moon - Proto-Ingyrric |
 | | z - voiced alveolar fricative /z/, as in English. |  | | No native orthography is known to have existed for Proto-Ingyrric. |  | | rr - voiceless alveolar trill--if r sounds like "ddddd", then rr sounds like "ttttt". |
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http://www.midnightmist.net/redmoon/en/proto-ingyrric
(880 words)
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| | How to make the sounds in Wolof - Consonants |
 | | It does not occur as a single consonant at the end of a word, but note that g in final position preceded by a vowel is usually voiceless (i.e [k]). |  | | The Wolof r is normally voiced but may occasionally be unvoiced when at the end of a word. |  | | The closure is made by the back of the tongue against the velum, in the same place where the sound [g] is made. |
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http://www.bcconline.org/wolof/Language/consonants.htm
(1228 words)
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| | The Greek Alphabet |
 | | There is one more sound in the language which is absent from the alphabet: it is the "ingma", the last consonant in "king". |  | | Notice that the second way of writing the lower case sigma is used exclusively when the letter appears at the end of a word (there is only one capital form); this rule has no exceptions. |  | | You may also find useful this page, showing the sounds of Modern Greek against all possible sounds of any language in the world. |
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http://www.cogsci.indiana.edu/farg/harry/lan/grkphon.htm
(3770 words)
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| | Galician language |
 | | However, in some aspects the Portuguese dialects are more conservative than the Galician ones, which for the most part lost of the voiced fricativevoiced fricatives/ /z/. |  | | On other hand, to the minority and unofficial Associaçom Galega da Língua, galego has never ceased to be a part of the Portuguese language, just like the Brazilian PortugueseBrazilian version, the African PortugueseAfrican varieties, and other dialects. |  | | In any case, the discussions on the Galician language tend to mirror the never-ending debate in Galician society between reasserting its own identity ("isolationism") or assimilating to a bigger cultural block. |
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http://www.infothis.com/find/Galician_language
(911 words)
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| | Phonetic transcription Antimoon Forum |
 | | You'll also see that, as it is voiced, it naturally sound be closer to [d] than to [t]. |  | | If you compare the way your tongue moves for [r\], [d] and [4] ([4] is X-SAMPA for this voiced alveolar tap), you'll find that the similarity of [d] and [4] lies in the fact that your tongue moves up to the top of your mouth but not for [r\]. |  | | Mxsmanic uses those concave lines to show that it's a diphthøng rather thæn two short vowels. |
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http://www.antimoon.com/forum/2004/5701.htm
(916 words)
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| | SquareSound Forums - WHOS IN DA HOUSE!!?? ...or forums.. *wink, wink* |
 | | In typing, however, there is no excuse for turning an voiced interdental fricative into a voiced alveolar plosive, even though such is common in the speech of those whose ancestors could not produce the interdental fricative in their native tongues. |  | | Such a conversion is like making Bach into Bock. |  | | By DA, I presume that you mean the definite article adjective, the. |
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http://www.squaresound.com/forum/showthread.php?t=1464
(336 words)
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| | Greek language |
 | | Note: [z] was an allophone of [s], used before voiced consonants, and in particular in the combination [zd] written as zeta (ζ). |  | | Greek has sandhi rules, some written, some not. |  | | The systematic distinction between long and short vowels has been lost in modern Greek. |
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http://www.infothis.com/find/Greek_language
(1736 words)
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| | OCCLUSIVE - Definition |
 | | plosive, plosive consonant, plosive speech sound, stop, stop consonant |  | | click, consonant, explosion, glottal catch, glottal plosive, glottal stop, implosion, labial stop, plosion, suction stop |
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http://www.hyperdictionary.com/dictionary/occlusive
(44 words)
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| | Stop consonant - TheBestLinks.com - Plosive, Consonant, International Phonetic Alphabet, Manner of articulation, ... |
 | | Plosive, Stop consonant, Consonant, International Phonetic Alphabet, Manner of... |  | | In the case of oral stops, the airflow is blocked completely, causing pressure to build up. |  | | A stop or plosive is a consonant sound produced by obstructing airflow in the vocal tract by the lips or tongue. |
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http://www.thebestlinks.com/Plosive.html
(279 words)
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| | [No title] |
 | | Article called "plosive consonant" does not exist in our database |  | | Click here to go to Encyclopedia Main page |
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http://www.tutorgig.com/ed/plosive_consonant
(18 words)
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| | Stop consonant : Plosive consonant |
 | | In the case of oral stops (also called plosives), the airflow is blocked completely, causing pressure to build up. |  | | The obstruction in the mouth is then suddenly opened; the released airflow produces a sudden impulse in pressure causing an audible sound. |  | | A stop is a consonant sound produced by obstructing airflow in the vocal tract by the lips or tongue. |
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http://www.fastload.org/pl/Plosive_consonant.html
(159 words)
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| | coronal consonant |
 | | The coronal consonants in English are all alveolar consonants: |  | | The term covers a wide range of pronunciations, including dental, alveolar, and postalveolar consonants. |  | | {{Place_of_articulation}} Coronal consonants are articulated with the tip or the front part of the tongue against the upper teeth, the upper gum (the alveolar ridge), or the part of the hard palate just behind it. |
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http://en.mcfly.org/coronal+consonant
(58 words)
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| | Talvezi e Zevone e Euransi |
 | | The h in Turkish, Swedish, Persian, English, Indonesian, Polish, Esperanto and Latin is not voiced [h\]. |  | | DOWNLOAD THE STANDARD TRUE TYPE FONT FOR EURANSI (96 kB) |
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http://www.sweb.cz/ls78/talvezi.htm
(213 words)
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| | [No title] |
 | | uni0261 E2DF 2FB A pag openg voiced velar plosive 00262 uni0262 E2E7 2FB A pcg smcapg 0x0262 voiced uvular plosive 00263 uni0263 E2E1 2FB A pdg swirlv voiced velar fricative 00264 uni0264 E268? |
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http://www.ams.org/STIX/bnb/stix-tbl.asc-2003-05-02
(52 words)
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| | LINGVA XRONARI |
 | | j = voiced grooved alveopalatal affricate, k = |  | | vowel, ui = short or long close front rounded vowel, b = voiced bilabial plosive, c = voiceless grooved alveopalatal affricate, ch = voiceless uvular |  | | fricative, d = voiced alveolar plosive, f = voiceless labiodental fricative, g = voiced velar plosive, gh = voiced uvular plosive, h = voiced glottal fricative, |
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http://www.christusrex.org/www1/pater/JPN-l-xronari.html
(107 words)
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| | Ket - UPSID Language Profile |
 | | segla(n, [velarized, voiced, dental_alveolar, lateral, approximant], [bulgarian, yakut, khmer, ket, yukaghir, georgian]). |  | | segla(n, [palatalized, voiced, dental_alveolar, lateral, approximant], [bulgarian, yurak, chuvash, amuesha, ket]). |  | | segla(n, [voiced, labio_dental, approximant], [norwegian, sinhalese, luvale, khmer, malayalam, ket]). |
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http://www.langmaker.com/db/ups_ket.htm
(260 words)
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