PAROLE IN INGLESE ASSOCIATE CON «ORAL VOWEL»
oral vowel
oral
vowel
nasal
that
produced
with
lowering
velum
escapes
both
through
nose
well
mouth
contrast
vowels
without
this
nasalization
explained
below
distinctive
obligatory
more
linguistic
importance
than
whether
consonant
french
appear
icphs
proceedings
limsi
table
realisations
appendix
only
represent
cases
north
figure
number
occurrences
contrasts
perspectives
shows
average
post
vocalic
durations
standard
deviations
first
speaker
things
wish
nasalised
superlinguo
make
start
making
normal
then
lower
your
smooshy
back
wals
chapter
pɛ̃
pain
bread
paix
peace
about
quarter
sample
have
acoustic
perceptual
study
nasality
taiwanese
strategy
used
distinguish
contexts
previous
studies
focused
irish
gaelic
audio
pronunciation
translations
from
foras
complete
paper
cascadilla
project
long
deviation
collins
always
spanish
italian
search
found
usage
examples
trends
frequency
ˈɔːrəl
ˈvaʊəl
modeling
emergence
typological
anomaly
elanguage
studied
example
regressive
elision
summari
which
acquires
10 LIBRI IN INGLESE ASSOCIATI CON «ORAL VOWEL»
Scopri l'uso di
oral vowel nella seguente selezione bibliografica. Libri associati con
oral vowel e piccoli estratti per contestualizzare il loro uso nella letteratura.
1
Unsupervised Neural Pattern Classifiers for
Oral Vowel ...
This thesis describes the development of unsupervised neural-based pattern classifiers for the training of vowel pronunciations for students learning a foreign language.
2
Creole Languages and Linguistic Typology
The reverse pattern of asymmetry is attested for Mauritian Creole, which,
according to Baker (1972), has the five oral vowel phonemes /i, u, e, o, a/ and the
three nasal phonemes /æ, ɔ, ɑ/. All nasal vowels in this case are considered to
have ...
Parth Bhatt, Tonjes Veenstra, 2013
3
A Course in English Phonetics
3. The vowel is half-close. 4. The vowel is central. 5. The lips are unrounded. 6.
The velic is closed. It is an oral vowel, back 1 . The vowel is long. 2. The vowel is
mid. 3. The vowel is half-open. 4. The vowel is front. 5. The lips are unrounded. 6.
4
Underlying Representations
When the stimulus contains an oral vowel the majority of words given by the
subjects have an oral vowel too, but 13.4 per cent of words given have a
nasalized vowel even though there was no nasalization in the stimulus. Similarly,
English ...
... u, and 5 is slightly higher than 0. Orthographically, a nasal vowel is
represented by an oral vowel symbol followed by n, i.e. in, en, on, un. E.g. din 'fry',
irin 'iron'; lyen 'that'19 son 'pay', ogb<?n 'wisdom', kun 'be full', odun 'year'. After m
and n, ...
6
Portuguese: A Reference Manual
3) Most Portuguese oral diphthongs are sequences of an oral vowel + semivowel
; these sequences are often called "falling" diphthongs since the semivowel
follows the vowel. SYM. LETT. EXAMPLES SYM. LETT. EXAMPLES [ai] ai pai ...
Sheila R. Ackerlind, Rebecca Jones-Kellogg, 2012
7
I Am a Linguist: With a Foreword by Peter Matthews
That is, there is a nasal vowel corresponding to four of the oral vowels — for
example, bon 'good' has the nasal vowel correspondent of the oral vowel in mort '
death' — but not for the other eight — there is no nasal vowel corresponding to
the ...
8
Towards a Typology of Poetic Forms: From Language to Metrics ...
There are relatively few diphthongs in segment 1: 4 [aI] in English to which might
be added the diphthong [ou] in certain varieties of English. In the French corpus it
is striking that there is only one case of the rounded front oral vowel [y] (turluru ...
Jean-Louis Aroui, Andy Arleo, 2009
9
Recent Development in Creole Studies
To sum up this section, I have presented cases where regressive nasalization
seems to apply, i.e., where an oral vowel preceding a nasal consonant
undergoes assimilation and cases where nasalized and non-nasalized forms
alternate freely ...
10
Universals of Human Language: Phonology
Assuming the validity of universal 14, Greenberg argues that universals 11 and
12 are then simply consequences of the historic origin of NV's. If NV's do indeed
develop from earlier sequences of oral vowel + nasal consonant, it follows that
the ...
Joseph Harold Greenberg, Charles Albert Ferguson, Edith A. Moravcsik, 1978