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| | Fricative consonant - |
 | | True doubly-articulated fricatives do not appear to occur in any language. |  | | For the pharyngeals and epiglottals, approximants are more numerous than fricatives. |  | | See table of consonants for a table of fricatives in English. |
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http://psychcentral.com/psypsych/Fricative_consonant
(584 words)
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| | Introduction to Segmental Phonology: Sound Index |
 | | The following is an index of the dental 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=12
(40 words)
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| | Dabok Emporium: fonologia del Linguaggio Ferengi" |
 | | Usually, Ferengi words are written phonemically, which matched the Ferengi writing system. |  | | Depending on environment, the back of the tongue may be against the velum or uvula. |  | | For example, in the word , the is made voiced, taking on the voiced quality of the . |
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http://www.geocities.com/xcursor/fferlan6.htm
(4887 words)
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| | Pronunciation of Scottish Gaelic Consonants |
 | | The symbols used between / / are as close as I can get in this computer medium to what was used in the Gaelic linguistics class I took, which is a common system used for representing Gaelic phonetics. |  | | So for people who learn the way I do, I offer this (and people who learn other ways may ignore the jargon!) |  | | broad lenited = voiceless velar fricative /x/ |
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http://www.medievalscotland.org/lang/gaelicconsonants.shtml
(2772 words)
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| | LINGUIST List 5.806: Proposal for an ASCII version of IPA, v.2.13 revised |
 | | The following tables follow the arrangement of the chart published in the Journal of the IPA for ease of reference. |  | | The range of the voice is divided into five units, to which the numbers 1 through 5 are assigned, with 1 low and 5 high. |  | | Voiced h could perhaps be written h$, on graphic grounds, but it has been written h" instead. |
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http://www.ling.ed.ac.uk/linguist/issues/5/5-806.html
(1757 words)
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| | Tadhg's Tips: concerning pronunciation of 'th' in Ireland |
 | | Learning German phonetics has saved my backside in trying to muck my way through reproducing Irish words when I'm versus the voice recognition sofware. |  | | When the pronunciation of the word ‘tá’ is given as ‘thaw’ they would understand it to mean that they should pronounce it the same way as they would say ‘thaw’ in English which is most emphatically NOT the case. |  | | This is, therefore, the origin of the characteristic Irish pronunciation of the two ‘th’ sounds in English; they’re Irish language sounds which the Irish people grafted into the English language when they first began learning it as a second language and which have remained in the English of many Irish people to the present day. |
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http://www.irishgaelictranslator.com/translation/sutra4407.html
(1468 words)
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| | Voiceless dental fricative - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | This page contains phonetic information in IPA, which may not display correctly in some browsers. |  | | Þ is used only if the fricative is the first letter in the word, ð is used otherwise but never as the first letter. |  | | The voiceless dental non-sibilant fricative is a type of consonantal sound used in some spoken languages. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voiceless_dental_fricative
(729 words)
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| | How to pronounce Hebrew |
 | | Perhaps sin should be a voiceless retroflex fricative, but this is not attested in any Semitic languages, to my knowledge. |  | | 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). |
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http://ir.iit.edu/~argamon/hebrew.html
(704 words)
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| | Dental consonant - Biocrawler |
 | | This page contains phonetic information in IPA, which may not display correctly in some browsers. |  | | Thus a good phonetic description of a language will specify whether coronal consonants are laminal or apical as well as whether they are dental or alveolar. |  | | In the case of the Romance languages, the rear-most contact is alveolar. |
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http://www.biocrawler.com/encyclopedia/Dental_consonant
(399 words)
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| | Phonetic Transcription Workshop |
 | | The voiced postalveolar fricative is the initial sound of the second syllable of version. |  | | There are two basic ways of making consonants: voiced and unvoiced. |  | | The voiced labiodental fricative is the initial consonant of veer. |
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http://www.uta.edu/english/tim/courses/4301w99/ptw.html
(1750 words)
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| | HLW: Word Forms: Processes: Phonetic Contexts |
 | | As in the example of English /t/, we need to ask whether this variability in the initial consonant is a special property of the word de or whether it's true of Spanish words in general. |  | | This is a different language, so the realization rules would not be the same as for the English phonemes that we write with /d/ and /e/. |  | | However, as we will see in the next section, the rules that specify how phonemes in a given language are to be produced or perceived in different contexts are not completely arbitrary. |
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http://www.indiana.edu/~hlw/PhonProcess/contexts.html
(2898 words)
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| | Learn the Language of most of the Tanak |
 | | I think it might be the [Voiced Pharyngeal Fricative], but especially this needs confirmation. |  | | Say the letters A, E, I, O, U. The letter U starts with the consonant "y", while the first four start with "aleph". |  | | This is not really used in english words but may be recognized by many english-speakers. |
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http://www.geocities.com/seek_for_Good_and_Truth/Learn_Biblical_Hebrew.htm
(876 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. |  | | 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. |
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http://www.sungwh.freeserve.co.uk/sapienti/phon/ipasymb.htm
(1574 words)
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| | Wikipedia: Edh |
 | | The lowercase version has retained the flowing shape of a Medieval scribe's d, which d itself has not. |  | | In Anglo-Saxon, ð may represent the same sound as in Icelandic, or the voiceless th of "thread", both of which were also represented by thorn (þ). |  | | Edh was usually used when the diagraph was voiced (as in "the" or "that"). |
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http://www.factbook.org/wikipedia/en/e/ed/edh.html
(246 words)
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| | Consonants |
 | | The two < th >s also occur at the ends of words; the voiceless dental fricative / |  | | One is commonly spelt and occurs, for instance, at the beginning of the word chip; its IPA symbol is a combination of / t / and / |  | | However, there are still two features of English pronunciation involving consonants that need explanation and practice: the occurrence of syllabic consonants and the form of consonants in inflections. |
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http://www.cf.ac.uk/encap/staff/tench/consonants.html
(2104 words)
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| | D - Free net encyclopedia |
 | | Digraphs of D are rare in English, although other languages use DH or DD for a voiced dental fricative (some Celtic languages) or an aspirated voiced dental plosive (some Indo-Aryan languages), or use affricates DZ, DV, or DZH. |  | | The letter D generally takes the voiced alveolar plosive value, IPA Template:IPA in most languages that use the Roman alphabet, including English. |  | | Exceptions to this include Vietnamese, where it represents a voiced alveolar fricative (/z/) or a palatal approximant (/j/), similar to the English letters z or y (the letter đ is used for the sound similar to the English d). |
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http://www.netipedia.com/index.php/D
(905 words)
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| | Lhuvan Sounds |
 | | Dental and palatal sounds occur originally in non-standard varieties only. |  | | The language is over-loaded with nasal stops and liquids, that make her sound very fluently. |
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http://www-public.rz.uni-duesseldorf.de/~sommerfs/lhuvan/p1.html
(255 words)
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| | cantar de mio cid methodology |
 | | Between vowels the voiceless alveolar fricative /s/ was represented by -ss-. |  | | The letter x represents the voiceless prepalatal fricative / |  | | Between vowels it stands for the voiced alveolar fricative /z/. |
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http://www.laits.utexas.edu/cid/main/methodology.php?v=nor
(3201 words)
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| | Catalan SAMPA |
 | | Although some mininal pairs can be found contrasting /n/ and [N] in final-word position, the allophonic nature of [N] is usually accepted (Badia, 1988, among others). |  | | The symbol [M] has been used in several projects for the transcription of the labiodental nasal; [F] is used here taking into account the X-SAMPA extended proposal. |  | | [v] is phonemic in certain geographic variants, but it is considered a result of a voicing assimilation in Standard Catalan (Carbonell and Llisterri, 1992; Recasens, 1993). |
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http://liceu.uab.es/~joaquim/language_resources/SAMPA_Catalan.html
(269 words)
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| | 2.8 Fricatives |
 | | The difference between the two labio-dental fricatives is their value for voicing. |  | | However, the places at which English fricatives are articulated can differ from the places at which English stops are articulated. |  | | We begin with two fricatives made by restricting the flow of air by bringing the lower lip and the upper teeth together. |
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http://www.mind.ilstu.edu/curriculum/language/weisler/tolwebrm/pages/208
(166 words)
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| | SAMPA - europäisch |
 | | SAMPA computer readable phoneme alphabet for European languages, with ASCII and IPA definitions (1990) Consonants b 98 voiced bilabial plosive c 99 voiceless palatal plosive C 67 voiceless palatal fricative d 100 voiced dental/alveol. |  | | approximant z 122 voiced alveolar fricative Z 90 voiced postalveolar fricative ? |  | | plosive T 84 voiceless dental fricative v 118 voiced labiodental fricative w 119 labial-velar approximant x 120 voiceless velar fricative H 72 labial-palat. |
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http://coral.lili.uni-bielefeld.de/Classes/Winter95/Grundkurs/grundkur/node21.html
(214 words)
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| | The Greek Alphabet |
 | | There are sounds common in other languages that do not exist in Greek. |  | | You may also find useful this page, showing the sounds of Modern Greek against all possible sounds of any language in the world. |  | | Contrary to English, the sound of the letter does not change at the beginning of a word (it does not become a [s]; Greeks have no trouble starting a word with [p]+[s]). |
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http://www.cogsci.indiana.edu/farg/harry/lan/grkphon.htm
(3993 words)
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| | Dental consonant: Encyclopedia topic |
 | | Dentals are consonants (consonants: A speech sound that is not a vowel) articulated with either the lower or the upper teeth, or both. |  | | dental nasal (dental nasal: the dental nasal is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages.... |  | | dental ejective (dental ejective: the dental ejective is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages.... |
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http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/reference/dental_consonant
(411 words)
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| | [No title] |
 | | The two segments were investigated in intervocalic position (post +continuant position) to study the effects of the L1 sounds on their acquisition. |  | | Specifically, it analyses the production and perception of two English phonemes: the voiced labiodental fricative and the voiced dental fricative. |  | | This piece of research aims at investigating the acquisition of English sounds by Catalan speakers from Barcelona and from Majorca. |
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http://www.cstr.ed.ac.uk/cgi-bin/cstr/lists.cgi?config=pworkshop-archive&entry=98_2001_spring/010220.html
(154 words)
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| | Phonemic Transcription Key (JBR RP) |
 | | characteristically an unvoiced dental fricative - nb distinct from / |  | | The difference between and , on the other hand, is that the first begins with / |  | | characteristically a voiced dental fricative - nb distinct from / |
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http://www.xibalba.demon.co.uk/jbr/phono.html
(2408 words)
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| | eth - Wiktionary |
 | | A letter (capital Ð, small ð) introduced into Old English to represent its dental fricative, then not distinguished from the letter thorn, no longer used in English but in still in modern use in Icelandic, Faroese, and phonetics to represent the voiced dental fricative "th" sound as in the English word then. |  | | This page was last modified 18:39, 23 April 2006. |  | | The sound /ɛ/ followed by the sound of the letter, by analogy with other letter names, such as those of f, l, and m. |
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http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/eth
(104 words)
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| | Pronunciation guide |
 | | Although there is a distinct IPA symbol for this ("h" with a right hook on the tail), the effect may be taken care of by a rewrite rule, as in the previous note. |  | | Note 3: In English, "h" is usually at least partially voiced in intervocalic position. |
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http://pages.cpsc.ucalgary.ca/~hill/papers/pronguid.htm
(621 words)
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| | Phonological section |
 | | If a dental or palatal stop is followed by a strident fricative, then geminate affricates result. |  | | In (3) d causes the preceding affricate to become voiced before being dropped, whereas in (4) d is absent thus no voice assimilation takes place and hence (3) and (4) are different. |  | | The dental stop is dropped in (1), resulting in homophony with (2). |
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http://www.nytud.hu/buszi/wp2/node4.html
(1615 words)
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| | [No title] |
 | | Identify the symbol that represents each set of articulatory parameters. |  | | voiced bilabial stop bð v o i c e l e s s b i l a b i a l s t o p v o i c e d b i l a b i a l n a s a l v o i c e l e s s l a b i o d e n t a l f r i c a t i v e v o i c e d l a b i o d e n t a l f r i c a t i v e v o i c e l e s s | | |