- as
basic rhotics in ****anese and
Korean languages. In
Australian English and most
American dialects of English, taps do not
function as
rhotics but are...
-
Examples of a
rhotic and a non-
rhotic speaker Rhotic (American)
speaker /ˈfɑrmər/ for
farmer Non-
rhotic (British)
speaker /ˈfɑːmə/ for
farmer Problems...
- Look up
rhotic in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Rhotic is a term in
linguistics derived from the Gr****
letter Rho
which may
refer to:
Rhotic consonant...
- Look up
rhoticism in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Rhoticism can
refer to:
Rhotacism (speech impediment),
difficulty in
pronouncing the /r/
sound Rhotacism...
-
interchangeability with
coronal rhotics (such as [r], [ɾ], and [ɹ]) and are (perhaps) not
rhotics at all. The
guttural realization of a lone
rhotic consonant is typical...
-
result of
gemination of a
single rhotic phoneme. This is
similar to the
common analysis of
Spanish and
Portuguese rhotics.
Catalan shares features with neighboring...
- r-colored
schwa Problems playing this file? See
media help. An r-colored or
rhotic vowel (also
called a
retroflex vowel,
vocalic r, or a
rhotacized vowel)...
-
characterized as
either rhotic or non-
rhotic. Most
accents in England, Wales, Australia, New Zealand, and
South Africa are non-
rhotic accents,
where the historical...
-
phonological description to
determine the
precise phonetics. A list of
rhotics is
given below.
Other flaps are ⟨ň⟩, ⟨l͏̌⟩, etc.
There are many alternate...
-
uninfluenced by upper-class non-
rhoticity and that
consequently have
remained consistently rhotic.
While non-
rhoticity spread on the East
Coast (perhaps...