PAROLE IN INGLESE ASSOCIATE CON «IMPLODED CONSONANT»
imploded consonant
imploded
consonant
collins
always
usage
examples
trends
word
frequency
level
data
available
ɪmˈpləʊdɪd
ˈkɒnsənənt
definitions
babylon
results
from
over
dictionaries
diction
singing
that
uses
only
supra
glottal
pressure
achieve
plosive
italian
french
principal
vowel
sound
consoantes
não
implodidas
glotalizadas
glottalized
exploded
infra
glottalimploded
речник
руски
македонски
на
почеток
крај
заменува
една
буква
phon
имплозивен
консонант
implode
larousse
ɪmˈpləʊd
transitive
verb
conjugation
linguistics
consonne
implosive
systranet
software
tools
♢imploser
pləʊd
trans
♢linguisticsother
expressions
systran
come
unto
singer
notes
preface
obviously
oasis
chorale
dentalized
endings
they
stay
behind
your
teeth
4 LIBRI IN INGLESE ASSOCIATI CON «IMPLODED CONSONANT»
Scopri l'uso di
imploded consonant nella seguente selezione bibliografica. Libri associati con
imploded consonant e piccoli estratti per contestualizzare il loro uso nella letteratura.
1
The singer's manual of English diction
Consonants Should Not Be Imploded in Singing In speaking, the voiceless
consonants t, p, and k are sometimes imploded, an imploded consonant being
one that causes a stop without an explosion of air. To illustrate, the consonants
that can ...
2
Introduction to Cambodian
Where an imploded consonant is the initial consonant of the 1st syllable, a
voiceless occlusive of similar articulation is heard in the variant form, e.g. dondry
or tddvy, boylw.dc or pdluidc (cf. tebo;(r) or pabo:(r) in 1 (ii) above). A further
variant of ...
3
Principles of Firthian Linguistics
... Cairo but is very tense in Cyrenaican (Bedouin) Arabic, wherein experimental
evidence seems to confirm it as not only 'emphatic' in the above terms but also as
an interesting example of a voiceless imploded consonant. 'D' does not occur ...
4
General and Amerindian ethnolinguistics: in remembrance of ...
... retroflexed vs. non-retroflexed, high vs. low pitch, open vs. close vowel
articulation, and globalized or imploded vs. non-glottalized and non- imploded
consonant types. These, and vowel harmony languages, are typically 'register'
languages ...
Mary Ritchie Key, Stanley Stewart Newman, Henry M. Hoenigswald, 1989