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| | Voiceless Plosives |
 | | In voiceless plosives, it occurs after /s/ and in unstressed syllable-initial position. |  | | This distribution of voicing and aspiration is not universal; the classic example to the contrary is Sanskrit and its modern descendents in India where all four combinations of voiceless/voiced versus aspirated/unaspirated occur. |  | | English has many examples of two or more contiguous plosives; they may occur in the same word or across word boundaries. |
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http://cslu.cse.ogi.edu/tutordemos/SpectrogramReading/cse551html/cse551/node36.html
(1317 words)
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| | Phonetics |
 | | This is defined by a library file and a user-defined feature structure can be implemented by modifying this file. |  | | The fragment below shows the syntax for defining an alphabet for a language. |  | | By default, Languid uses the International Phonetic Alphabet, where each consonant and vowel implement the feature structures defined above. |
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http://jebbo.home.texas.net/conlang/phonetics.htm
(301 words)
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| | Sounds and Spelling of Dutch |
 | | In order to avoid problems regarding fonts and computer platforms, the phonemic representation does not use the IPA symbols (IPA = International Phonetic Association), but rather their ASCII-representation, following the scheme designed by Evan Kirshenbaum. |  | | : velar plosive, voiceless, unaspirated Spelling: k, kk, c, q Examples: keuken, dak, query Phonetic: kYI.k@(n), dAk, kve:ri English : kitchen, roof (thatch), query German : Küche, Dach, Nachfrage Sound : g Descr. |  | | : velar plosive, voiced, unaspirated Remark : only as a combinational variant of k, and in loan-words Spelling: g, k Examples: goal, zakdoek Phonetic: goUl |
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http://www.rudhar.com/lingtics/nedsound.htm
(1881 words)
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| | Gmane -- Mail To News And Back Again |
 | | There the author lists 3 important problems with which he doesn't deal, as follows: 1. |  | | We will not be able to correlate the three series of Indo-European plosives at their various stages of development with the plosive series of the Vasconic and Atlantic languages. |  | | If one wants to show the validity of his claim for the proposed etymology, he should prove these two phenomena, at least by providing parallel examples. |
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http://article.gmane.org/gmane.science.linguistics.linguist-list/3010
(7700 words)
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| | Arabic - UPSID Language Profile |
 | | PC Magazine Editors' Choice for web survey software. |  | | segfr(n, [voiced, dental, sibilant, fricative], [russian, french, kurdish, albanian, hungarian, tuva, arabic, tuareg, kabardian]). |  | | segfr(n, [long, voiceless, uvular, fricative], [arabic, greenlandic, lak]). |
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http://www.langmaker.com/db/ups_arabic.htm
(690 words)
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| | Voiceless dental fricative - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Native speakers of those languages sometimes have difficulty enunciating or distinguishing it, and replace it with a voiceless alveolar fricative or a voiceless dental plosive. |  | | The voiceless dental fricative is a type of consonantal sound used in some spoken languages. |  | | The IPA symbol is the Greek letter theta, which is used for this sound in Greek, and the sound is thus often referred to as "theta". |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voiceless_dental_fricative
(598 words)
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| | Dental consonant - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | 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. |  | | However, they are actually alveolar, or perhaps denti-alveolar; the difference between the Romance languages and English is not so much where the tongue contacts the roof of the mouth, as which part of the tongue makes the contact. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dental_consonant
(375 words)
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| | ELL Honours AE : Moorthy (1997) |
 | | Dental Fricatives in the Speech of Educated Singaporeans |  | | The speculation that Singaporean do not always use a voiceless alveolar plosive, but rather, a phoneme in-between that of a voiceless dental fricative and a voiceless alveolar plosive, to replace a voiceless dental fricative, will also be explored. |  | | In so doing, it hopes to generate conclusions about the frequency of dental fricative replacement by alveolar plosives, if any, and how this frequency is affected by the formality of the context. |
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http://davidd.myplace.nie.edu.sg/aes/moorthy-1997.htm
(142 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. |  | | 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). |  | | Note that there is no qamas qatan, since the Baalei Mesorah saw fit to use one symbol, not two. |
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http://ir.iit.edu/~argamon/hebrew.html
(704 words)
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| | The phonetic and phonological framework |
 | | An example of a phonetic process would be the way in which a normally alveolar voiceless plosive [t] changes into a DENTAL voiceless plosive in a word like 'eighth' or 'width'. |  | | If the answer is 'yes' then the process is phonological; if the answer is 'no' then the process is phonetic. |  | | The next classnotes continue with what we mean by phonetic and phonological processes and begin to look at what's going on in a couple of processes in English accents. |
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http://www.essex.ac.uk/speech/teaching-01/474/classnotes/474cnotes1.xml
(652 words)
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| | Search Encyclopedia.com |
 | | Look up Voiceless dental plosive on HighBeam™ Research. |  | | African languages -> Khoisan The Khoisan, or Click, linguistic family is made up of three branches: the Khoisan languages of the San (Bushmen) and Khoikhoi, spoken in various parts of sub-Saharan Africa; Sandawe, a language found in E Africa; and Hatsa (Hadzane or Hadzapi), also spoken in E Africa. |  | | Scott co., Ill. Professor at Chicago College of Dental Surgery (now part of Loyola Univ.) from 1883 to 1889 and professor (from 1891) and dean (from 1897) at the Northwestern Univ. dental school, he made large contributions to dentistry as teacher, as originator... |
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http://www.encyclopedia.com/searchpool.asp?target=Voiceless+dental+plosive
(521 words)
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| | Articles - Syriac language |
 | | In different variations of a certain lexical root, a root consonant might exist in plosive form in one variation and fricative form in another. |  | | Voiceless pharyngeal fricative — /ħ/ (in many eastern dialects this becomes /x/) |  | | In the Syriac alphabet, a single letter is used for each pair. |
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http://www.gaple.com/articles/Syriac_language
(2053 words)
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| | Valoda |
 | | The dental nasal n occurs as a velar nasal before the velar plosives k and g. |  | | A voiceless bi-labial plosive, like the p of English part, but lacking the |  | | A voiceless consonant immediately preceding a voiced consonant other than |
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http://ai1.mii.lu.lv/valoda/phonetic.htm
(2430 words)
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| | Voiceless Dental Plosive Encyclopedia Article, Definition, History, Biography |
 | | Find More Information about "Voiceless dental plosive" in: |  | | "Voiceless dental plosive" articles in these other popular reference sources: |  | | Look for voiceless dental plosive - Find voiceless dental plosive at one of the best sites the Internet has to offer! |
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http://www.karr.net/search/encyclopedia/Voiceless_dental_plosive
(185 words)
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| | voiceless - definition of voiceless by the Free Online Dictionary, Thesaurus and Encyclopedia. |
 | | This information should not be considered complete, up to date, and is not intended to be used in place of a visit, consultation, or advice of a legal, medical, or any other professional. |  | | To me, at least, the presence -- not of human life only, but of life in any other form than that of the green things which grow upon the soil and are voiceless -- is a stain upon the landscape -- is at war with the genius of the scene. |  | | voiceless - being voiceless through injury or illness and thus incapable of all but whispered speech |
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http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Voiceless
(293 words)
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| | Silent letters. Antimoon Forum |
 | | the "wh" again is a digraph for /W/ (pronounced like /w/ but voiceless in some accents and like /hw/ in other accents) |  | | the "wh" again is a digraph for /W/ (pronounced like /w/ but voiceless in some accents and like /hw/ in other accents)'' |  | | Again, It's only a minority that make such a distinctions. |
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http://www.antimoon.com/forum/posts/5752.htm
(980 words)
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| | Plosive dental de Voiceless |
 | | English version: Voiceless dental plosive Next: Eligiusz Niewiadomski Up |  | | El plosive dental voiceless no ocurre en inglés, sino es similar al sonido de la letra ' t ', a menos que la lengüeta esté tocando la parte posteriora de los dientes y no del canto alveolar. |  | | El plosive dental voiceless es una cruz-lingu!i'stico común de los sonidos. |
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http://www.yotor.net/wiki/es/pl/Plosive%20dental%20de%20Voiceless.htm
(315 words)
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| | The Language Vorlin |
 | | : the voiceless alveolo-palatal fricative which is spelled x in the Pinyin system of romanizing Chinese (spelled hs in Wade-Giles) |  | | Occasionally a hard-to-pronounce consonant pair, such as sz or pd, will occur in a compound word. |  | | It does not matter whether voiceless consonants are aspirated or not. |
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http://www.rickharrison.com/language/vorlin1999.html
(8346 words)
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| | LINGUIST List 14.2943: Marked Phonemes of Endangered Languages |
 | | Wari and Oro Win, Chapakuran languages of Brazil, the latter on the brink of extinction, both contain a sound described as a voiceless apical-dental plosive followed by a voiceless labio-labial trill (Ref: Dan Everett). |  | | I also include a couple of rare contrasts that were brought to my attention on that occasion: Ditidaht, a Southern Wakashan language of Vancover Island, has a sound that has been described as a pharyngealised glottal stop (Ref: Adam Werle). |  | | Oodham, a Uto-Aztecan language, has a fortis/ lenis distinction between stop consonants (Ref: Paul Kilpatrick), and Ega, a Kwa/ Kru language, has implosives at five places of articulation (Ref: Bruce Connell). |
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http://www.ling.ed.ac.uk/linguist/issues/14/14-2943.html
(288 words)
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| | Tshe -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article |
 | | Today, most often it is transliterated as ć or, without the (A mark added to a letter to indicate a special pronunciation) diacritic, as c; less frequent transliterations are tj, ty, cj, cy, ch (also used for (Click link for more info and facts about che) che) and tch. |  | | It represents an (Click link for more info and facts about iotated) iotated (Click link for more info and facts about voiceless dental plosive) voiceless dental plosive /tc̡/. |
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http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/encyclopedia/T/Ts/Tshe.htm
(214 words)
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| | Encoding |
 | | All variants coming after * as well as all remarks on the same line have been left out. |  | | g has voice, ch is voiceless, gg is the 'g' of (english) 'goal' |  | | Singly spelled means always 'short', even in open syllables (contrary to normal spelling). |
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http://www.meertens.knaw.nl/projecten/mand/EGTRPkipatabel.html
(724 words)
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| | [No title] |
 | | %err: [%fnt: Monaco:9] voiced bilabial nasal replaced by voiceless velar plosive; @Date: 24-MAY-1969 *CHI: cuddle teddy boy [= IÕm cuddling teddy boy]. |  | | %err: [%fnt: Monaco:9] voiceless alveolar fricative replaced by voiceless velar plosive; %com: two separate renditions *CHI: moo+cow. |  | | %err: [%fnt: Monaco:9] voiced palato-alveolar affricate replaced by voiced dental plosive; *CHI: canÕt do it. |
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http://www.cyber.sccs.chukyo-u.ac.jp/jchat/clan/eng/crutten/jane08.cha
(583 words)
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| | Tshe |
 | | It represents an iotated voiceless dental plosive /tc̡/. |
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http://www.worldhistory.com/wiki/T/Tshe.htm
(234 words)
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