Results 101 to 110 of about 4,070 (162)

Icelandic Children's Acquisition of Consonants and Consonant Clusters

Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2021
Purpose This study investigated Icelandic-speaking children's acquisition of singleton consonants and consonant clusters. Method Participants were 437 typically developing children aged 2;6–7;11 (years;months) acquiring Icelandic as their first language.
Thora Másdóttir   +2 more
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Saying consonant clusters quickly

Journal of Phonetics, 1996
Abstract Articulatory variation as a function of speech rate is investigated experimentally. Specifically, two strategies for increasing rate are considered: shortening the duration of each component of a sequence and increasing the relative overlap of these components. Reduction in the magnitude of the articulations is also reported.
Dani Byrd, Cheng Cheng Tan
openaire   +1 more source

Recognition of consonant clusters

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1987
Perceptual processing of speech has been frequently studied using analyses of consonant recognition errors. Typically, nonsense CV or VC syllables are used as stimulus materials. Nonsense consonant clusters constitute a class of sounds that are largely devoid of semantic context, yet they represent a higher level of phonological organization ...
Moshe Yuchtman   +2 more
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Durational characteristics of Hindi consonant clusters

Proceeding of Fourth International Conference on Spoken Language Processing. ICSLP '96, 1996
Various durations of closure, preceding vowel etc. have been studied in meaningful Hindi two consonant cluster words with stop consonants (such as /shptah/ (week) and //spl int//spl Lambda/ bd (word)). The data included 80 most frequently occurring clusters of the Hindi language.
Nisheeth Shrotriya   +3 more
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Temporal effects of geminate consonants and consonant clusters

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1987
Current phonological theory analyzes geminate consonants as sequences of adjacent timing slots that completely share features while closing one syllable and opening the next. This analysis predicts that the temporal organization of utterances with geminate consonants is parallel to that of utterances including heterosyllabic consonant clusters.
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Consonant Clusters in English

American Speech, 1965
THE TABLES OF CONSONANT CLUSTERS displayed in the following pages are summations of many such compilations that have previously appeared. There is almost nothing new here. Nor has anything old been left out which is attested by its occurrence in a word which could not be rejected as a nonce word or dialectal in the European sense or obsolete or foreign
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Consonant Clusters in Tai

Language, 1954
1.1. Very few of the languages of the Tai family still preserve consonant clusters of the type pl-, kl-, pr-, kr-, etc. The two languages generally known to preserve such clusters, at least in part, are Siamese and Ahom, the latter an extinct language of Assam.' The dialects of Wu-ming and Lung-an, both in central Kwangsi province,2 are the other ...
openaire   +1 more source

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