suprasegmental การใช้
- A similar process occurs in suprasegmental process applying to a whole syllable.
- The 1993 version, however, had a more expanded suprasegmental section.
- Furthermore, long vowels and diphthongs have two suprasegmental lengths.
- All stressed long syllables can possess a suprasegmental length feature.
- It was a suprasegmental feature whose exact phonetic nature is not quite clear.
- These are mentioned at Estonian phonology-Suprasegmental length.
- Suprasegmentals are not so prominent as they are in the other dialects of Rajasthani.
- Wutung also makes suprasegmental distinctions in tone.
- There is one phonemic suprasegmental, the palatalizing suprasegmental that affects the pronunciation of an entire syllable.
- There is one phonemic suprasegmental, the palatalizing suprasegmental that affects the pronunciation of an entire syllable.
- However, these function like suprasegmentals, and the four parameters listed above are the crucial ones.
- The dilemma is fairly easily resolved when listening through paralinguistic cues and particularly suprasegmental cues ( intonation ).
- They have suprasegmental patterns which may be more complicated, but words don't generally have a stressed syllable.
- It is now accepted that the right hemisphere plays an important role in the processing of suprasegmental acoustic features like prosody.
- In a couple of languages, including Ter Sami ), suprasegmental palatalization contrasts with segmental palatal articulation ( palatal consonants ).
- Consequently, in the Slavic languages that retain it, vowel length is often a suprasegmental feature tied to the accentual system rather phonemes.
- Suprasegmental is a term used for intonation, stress, and other prosodic aspects of speech that are hard to denote at the segmental level.
- Tonal languages are often stripped of articulation, leaving only suprasegmental features such as duration and tone, and when whistled retain the spoken melodic line.
- In written language the palatalizing suprasegmental is indicated with a free-standing acute accent between a stressed vowel and the following consonant, as follows:
- Sometimes syllable length is also counted as a suprasegmental feature; for example, in some Germanic languages, long vowels may only exist with short consonants and vice versa.
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