-
Coarticulation in its
general sense refers to a
situation in
which a
conceptually isolated speech sound is
influenced by, and
becomes more like, a preceding...
- of each other, and two or more may work
together in what is
called coarticulation.: 10-11 The five main
active parts can be
further divided, as many...
- delimiters. The
physiological or
psychological mechanisms of
coarticulation are unknown, and
coarticulation is
often loosely referred to as a
segment being "triggered"...
-
representing successive letters blend into each
other in a
process termed coarticulation, so the
conversion of the
analog signal to
discrete characters can be...
- This
article contains phonetic transcriptions in the
International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA). For an
introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA. For...
-
vowels are made
using the
tongue body, they are
highly affected by
coarticulation with
vowels and can be
produced as far
forward as the hard
palate or...
- on likelihood)
rather than a
categorical one.
Though it
seems that
coarticulation—a
phenomenon which may
happen between adjacent words just as easily...
- 003. Brunelle, Marc (2009). "Northern and
Southern Vietnamese Tone
Coarticulation: A
Comparative Case Study" (PDF).
Journal of
Southeast Asian Linguistics...
- Mielke, Jeff; Archangeli,
Diana (2008). "More
velar than /g/:
Consonant Coarticulation as a
Cause of Diphthongization" (PDF). In Chang,
Charles B.; Haynie...
-
lengthening Nasalization Tonogenesis Floating tone ****imilation
Fusion Coarticulation Palatalization Velarization Labialization Final devoicing Metaphony...