- This
article contains phonetic transcriptions in the
International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA). For an
introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA. For...
- *toutā,
Primitive Irish *tōθā, Old
Irish túath /t̪ʰuaθ/ and
ultimately debuccalisation in most
Irish and some
Scottish dialects to /t̪ʰuəh/,
shift in Central...
-
dialects share phonological features with ****amese,
including the
debuccalisation of স & শ [ʃ] to হ [h] or খ [x]. The
influence of Tibeto-Burman languages...
- alveolarisation,
where they
become /s/ and /z/ (in some
African varieties); and
debuccalisation,
where /θ/
becomes [h]
before a
vowel (found in some
Scottish English)...
-
Gheada (IPA: [ħeˈaðɐ]) is a term in
Galician to
describe the
debuccalisation of the
voiced velar stop /ɡ/ to a,
usually voiceless, back fricative, most...
-
surprising aspect is that /j/ is
almost always pronounced as /d͡ʒ/.
Debuccalisation of /s/, to /ɦ/ in
between vowels also occurs. In the
modern generation...