- [ ], / / and ⟨ ⟩, see IPA § Brackets and
transcription delimiters.
Debuccalization or
deoralization is a
sound change or
alternation in
which an oral...
-
distribution of th-
debuccalization imposes special constraints on the
progress of th-fronting in Glasgow. In
accents with th-
debuccalization, the
cluster /θr/...
- (
debuccalization):
Latin ****,
English six,
ancient Gr**** ἕξ /héks/. PIE *s was
elided between vowels after an
intermediate step of
debuccalization: Sanskrit...
- occlusion, to lose its
place of
articulation (a
phenomenon called debuccalization,
which turns a
consonant into a
glottal consonant like [h] or [ʔ])...
- have [ʎ] as a
distinct phoneme. Most
speakers of
coastal dialects may
debuccalize or
aspirate syllable-final /s/ to [h], or drop it entirely, so that está...
-
Andean highlands.
Debuccalization is
frequently called "aspiration" in English, and aspiración in Spanish. When
there is no
debuccalization, the syllable-final...
- such as
distinctive regional phonology and
vocabulary (for example, a
debuccalization process stronger than that of Portuguese, a
different system of the...
- with a
strong burst of air
Voiceless glottal fricative, the
sound [h]
Debuccalization, the
conversion of a
consonant to [h] or [ʔ]
Rough breathing, a symbol...
-
typically precede voiced consonants, and
devoicing may be
realized with
debuccalization (where /d/ is
realized as [.], for instance) AAVE
speakers may not...
- Proto-Indo-European
phoneme *s at the
beginning of a word
became *h by
debuccalization and
syllabic *m̥
became *a,
giving the
combined form *ha-. The initial...