Showing 201 - 220 results of 243 for search '"diphthong"', query time: 0.11s Refine Results
  1. 201

    The Perception of Vowels and Phonological Processes of English by Poles Demonstrating Limited Knowledge of English as Evidenced by Amateur Phonetic Transcription by Hanna Dziczek-Karlikowska

    Published 2019-06-01
    “…The graphic representation of the closing diphthongs confirmed that they are invariably perceived as a vowel + off-glide sequence also by the musically gifted and/or educated transcribers. …”
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    Article
  2. 202

    Open syllable lengthening and diphthongisation in Upper Middle High German: evidence from verse by Booth, J

    Published 2023
    “…Instead, he uses the circumflex ‘length marker’ to indicate diphthongal quality. The scribes’ dialect thus represents a key turning point: diphthongisation was well progressed, but OSL had yet to occur.…”
    Journal article
  3. 203

    An instrumental analysis of oral monophthongs in Aceh Barat dialect of Acehnese by Tanzir Masykar, Roni Agusmaniza, Nurul Taflihati Masykar, Febri Nurrahmi

    Published 2021-08-01
    “…Pase dialect of Acehnese has been described to have oral and nasal monophthongs and diphthongs, but no studies on Aceh Barat dialect phonetic features of Acehnese have been made. …”
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    Article
  4. 204

    Phonological awareness and quick naming of developmental dyslexia in Sekolah Dasar Inklusif Pantara, Jakarta by Yanti Br Sitepu

    Published 2018-06-01
    “…The first experiment consisted of 100 words (simple words, digraphs, diphthongs, and consonant clusters). The second experiment consisted of 48 words (24 words with illustrations and 24 words with trisilabik). …”
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    Article
  5. 205

    Lexical innovation processes of youth netspeak on Malay twitter posts by Nur Nashatul Nasuha Nazman, Su-Hie Ting, Kee-Man Chuah

    Published 2023
    “…On vowel changes, the results show that there is a simplification of diphthongs to monophthongs, and a movement towards vowels in the middle position [e] or [o]. …”
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    Article
  6. 206

    A Phonetic Account of Spanish-English Bilinguals’ Divergence with Agreement by Laura Colantoni, Ruth Martínez, Natalia Mazzaro, Ana T. Pérez-Leroux, Natalia Rinaldi

    Published 2020-11-01
    “…Spanish gender is encoded by word-final, unstressed vowels (/a e o/), which may diphthongize in word-boundary vowel sequences. English neutralizes unstressed final vowels and separates across-word vocalic sequences. …”
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    Article
  7. 207

    Linguistic Progmatics of English Borrowings in Russian Mass Communication Discourse by Olga Volkova

    Published 2021-02-01
    “…Phonetic assimilation of translingual shoe names presupposes following pronunciation rules of the Russian language, including the reduction of vowels in the first pre-stressed syllable; devoicing voiced consonants at the end of a word; palatalization; coexistence of diphthongized and monophthongized variants of vowel pronunciation, which indicates the incompleteness of phonetic adaptation.…”
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    Article
  8. 208

    Vocalic Ratio as One of the Most Important Criteria of Phonetic Classification of World Languages by N. K. Genidze

    Published 2020-11-01
    “…Increasing number of vowels, emerging diphthongs and triphthongs are the result of analytic abilities of the language.…”
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    Article
  9. 209

    THE SYSTEM OF VOWEL PHONEMES IN THE TOLES (CHOLUSHMAN) SPEECH OF THE ULAGAN DIALECT OF THE TELENGIT LANGUAGE (IN A COMPARATIVE ASPECT) by N D Almadakova

    Published 2017-12-01
    “…A specific feature of the Cholushman dialect, which distinguishes it from the Altai language, is the presence of diphthongs. The subject of this study are the short vowels of the Toles dialect. …”
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    Article
  10. 210

    Žiemgalos vardas skandinavų runomis by Alvydas Butkus

    Published 2011-10-01
    “…</em></p> <p>We are not sure about the phonetical value of the root <em>sim- </em>because the rune <em>i </em>might mean not only the diphthongs <em>ei </em>or <em>ai </em>but (more frequently) the vowels <em>i</em>, <em>e.…”
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    Article
  11. 211

    Ahrensi õlgadel. Ahrensi ortograafia ajalooliselt ja tänapäeval by Mati Hint

    Published 2018-10-01
    “…Ahrens’s orthography was reinterpreted in a way that required any sound in a stressed syllable to be determined to have one of three quantity degrees (short, long, overlong), and the diphthongs and consonant clusters to have long or overlong quantity. …”
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    Article
  12. 212

    Fonologinė kirčio raidos baltų kalbose interpretacija by Jonas Kazlauskas

    Published 2011-05-01
    “…Evidently, the stressed diphthongs begin to differ not according to intonation, but first of all according to the length of the first or the second components. …”
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    Article
  13. 213

    Acoustic Analysis of the Speakers&#x2019; Variability for Regional Accent-Affected Pronunciation in Bangladeshi Bangla: A Study on Sylheti Accent by Shafkat Kibria, M. Shahidur Rahman, M. Reza Selim, M. Zafar Iqbal

    Published 2020-01-01
    “…The analysis considers the seven monophthongal and four diphthongal vowels of Bangla to investigate the acoustic characteristics of two groups of single-accent speakers and their correlation on the articulation of the Standard Colloquial Bangladeshi Bangla (SCBB). …”
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    Article
  14. 214

    Acoustics of long vowels in Arabic-speaking children with hearing impairments by Bassil Mashaqba, Anas Huneety, Nisreen Al-Khawaldeh, Mutasim Al-Deaibes, Zainab Zeidan

    Published 2023-05-01
    “…The study also examined errors in long vowels and diphthongs. The findings indicated that after cochlear implantation, the formants of the vowels produced by hearing-impaired speakers shifted closer to those produced by their NH peers, and CI users had a greater vowel space compared to HA users. …”
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    Article
  15. 215

    PHONOLOGY OF KAUR LANGUAGE IN GENERATIVE THEORY by Wisman Hadi, I Wayan Pastika, I Nyoman Suparwa, A.A. Putu Putra

    Published 2013-02-01
    “…In addition, it was found that there were 3 diphthongs, 9 series of vowels, 14 clusters of consonants, 22 series of consonants, and several unique series of vowel-consonants, 36 syllabic structures of bases, 5 basic patterns of syllabic structures of affixes, and 4 structures of mixed affixes.…”
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    Article
  16. 216

    LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT OF AUTISM CHILDREN IN ISLAMIC PSYCHOANALYTIC TREATMENT (Case Study at Southeast Sulawesi Autism Service Center) by Sitti Fauziah M, Abdul Rahman Jaya

    Published 2022-12-01
    “…The research findings showed that the language development abilities of autistic children in the phonological form in obtaining vowel sounds and diphthongs were good. However, they were still lacking in obtaining consonants. …”
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    Article
  17. 217

    Phonological aspects of al-Issa Arabic, a Bedouin dialect in the north of Jordan by Anas al Huneety, Bassil Mashaqba, Riyad abu Hula, Baraah Khalid Thnaibat

    Published 2021-07-01
    “…These features include the unlimited affrication of ∗k, the realization of the palato-alveolar/j/ as [y] in all word positions (yaʔyaʔa phenomenon), and the unconditioned retention of Classical Arabic diphthongs ∗aw and ∗ay in all contexts. In terms of syllable structure, the core syllable types observed are: CV, CVC, CVV, CVVC, CCVVC, CVC1C1, and C1C2VVC. …”
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  18. 218

    Tarmių fonetinių ypatybių atspindžiai „Sakytinės lietuvių kalbos tekstyne“ by Genovaitė Kačiuškienė

    Published 2012-04-01
    “…The Lowland dialect predominates there; it is characterised by the diphthongisation of vowels <em>o, ė, </em>change of diphthongs <em>ie, uo</em>, retention of the ancient <em>*an </em>in end syl­lables. …”
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    Article
  19. 219

    Karelian Toponymy in the State Index of Place Names: Mistakes Correction by Ekaterina V. Zakharova, Denis V. Kuzmin, Irma I. Mullonen

    Published 2022-12-01
    “…The authors provide a classification of the main types of phonetic mistakes made in SIPN (inconsistent rendering of the sounds lacking direct equivalents in Russian — long vowels, diphthongs, umlauts, geminates), and highlight problems such as disregard of the complex structure characteristic of Balto-Finnic toponymy, linguistically arbitrary processing of names by collectors, trying to link the Karelian toponymic base to Russian word, as well as liberal treatment of the dialect map and unfortunate slips and typos. …”
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  20. 220

    The Gornja Lonja Dialect of the Kajkavian Dialect Group by Željka Brlobaš, Mijo Lončarić

    Published 2012-01-01
    “…The vocalism consists of two vocal systems, which are distinguished by the diphthongs <i>ie</i> and <i>ou</i> in long syllables of Zelina vernaculars. …”
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