c ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci ck cl cm cn co cp cr cs ct cu cw cy cz

Перевод: consonantal speek consonantal


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Тезаурус:

  1. This occurs when two words have the same vowel sounds in conjunction with different consonantal sounds: A stitch in time saves nine.
  2. He seems to have specific problems with complex consonantal blends (-nch; -ck-).
  3. Also within the /a/ system, however, there is a high incidence of back varieties of /a/: in BV, this vowel is realized in certain following consonantal environments as a long, back vowel, which is in many contexts virtually identical to RP (as in RP dance, bath ); on a superficial view we may therefore be tempted to believe that speakers are adopting this external norm.
  4. Some intensive practice in listening for complex consonantal blends; for example What is the middle sound of switching, tasted, winter, entrance?
  5. The first arises from the fact that most BV vowels are long or short according to following consonantal environment.
  6. The main points arising from this are that: (1) the vowel system is totally different from mainstream British English in terms of vowel-length, vowel-height, diphthongization and other properties (for example, vowel-length is not usually contrastive, as it is alleged to be in RP, and so most vowel-phonemes, such as /e/, as in gate, save , are realized as considerably longer or shorter allophones according to consonantal environment); (2) allophones of phonemes can overlap phonetically with allophones of other phonemes in a manner that is not permitted by classical phoneme theory (Bloomfield, 1933); (3) lexical items do not necessarily belong to the same vowel phoneme classes as they do in RP and SBE (for example, whereas good and food have different vowels in most SBE, they have the same vowel in Ulster English); and (4) many sets of lexical items exhibit vowel alternations, in that the vowels in these items are realizations of two different phonemes.
  7. It was now that the Greeks (illiterate for several centuries, since the clumsy syllabary evolved in the later Bronze Age had died with the social system it served) borrowed the suppler consonantal alphabet developed by the Phoenicians and improved on it by using some of the symbols for vowels.
  8. It had been noticed in the inner city that many vowel variables could be described in terms of sub-scales according to following consonantal environments (as in table 4.5); we attempted, therefore, to operationalize this perception by distinguishing following environments roughly based on the sonority scales discussed by Taylor (1973) and others adapted to an "allophonic length" dialect (J. Milroy, 1976a).
  9. The repetition of a consonantal sound, usually at the beginning of words, although medial and final alliteration are common, eg After life's fitful fever.
  10. The systematic study of a non-standard system, however, supports the argument that there could have been orderly variation in EModE involving merger and reversal patterns of /a/ and / (or / in certain consonantal environments, and suggests that the usual account of the history of /a/ (fronting to ae and subsequent split into two RP phonemes) is oversimplified.
  11. Although it is a consonantal loss, it is not said to be ugly or careless in England generally.
  12. Table 4.2 is a simplified representation of the range of /a/, in terms of following consonantal environments.

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