Results 1 to 10 of about 53,993 (275)
Consonant gemination in Italian: the affricate and fricative case [PDF]
Consonant gemination in Italian affricates and fricatives was investigated, completing the overall study of gemination of Italian consonants. Results of the analysis of other consonant categories, i.e.
De Nardis, Luca +1 more
core +4 more sources
Context-dependent articulation of consonant gemination in Estonian [PDF]
The three-way quantity system is a well-known phonological feature of Estonian. In a number of studies it has been shown that quantity is realized in a disyllabic foot by the stressed-to-unstressed syllable rhyme duration ratio and also by pitch movement
Helen Türk +2 more
doaj +5 more sources
The rise of gemination in Celtic [version 2; peer review: 4 approved] [PDF]
This study investigates systematically the emergence and establishment of geminate consonants as a phonological class in the Celtic branch of Indo-European.
David Stifter
doaj +2 more sources
Lexical and syntactic gemination in Italian consonants—Does a geminate Italian consonant consist of a repeated or a strengthened consonant? [PDF]
Two types of consonant gemination characterize Italian: lexical and syntactic. Italian lexical gemination is contrastive, so that two words may differ by only one geminated consonant. In contrast, syntactic gemination occurs across word boundaries and affects the initial consonant of a word in specific contexts, such as the presence of a monosyllabic ...
Di Benedetto M. -G. +6 more
openaire +5 more sources
In Eastern Andalusian Spanish, consonants are deleted in syllable-final position, triggering regular gemination of a following consonant, even across word boundaries.
Alfredo Herrero de Haro, John Hajek
doaj +1 more source
The article provides a descriptive account of the phonology of Kussummiya spoken in southwest Ethiopia. It is basically a qualitative study in that linguistic data are collected from native speakers by using elicitation technique. The collected data are
Wondwosen Tesfaye
doaj +1 more source
The rise of gemination in Celtic [version 1; peer review: 2 approved]
This study investigates systematically the emergence and establishment of geminate consonants as a phonological class in the Celtic branch of Indo-European.
David Stifter
doaj +1 more source
This article describes the phonology of T’ambaaro, a Highland East Cushitic language of the Afro-asiatic phylum spoken in southwest Ethiopia. The language has twenty-four consonant phonemes, and five oral vowels and one nasal vowel whose phonemic status ...
Ongaye Oda Orkaydo
doaj +1 more source
KEKELIRUAN PELAFALAN FONEM DALAM KOSAKATA BAHASA INDONESIA OLEH VLOGGER ASING BERBAHASA INDONESIA
This research was conducted to describe the phonemic pronunciation errors which include vocals and consonants, and consonant accompaniment sounds in Indonesian vocabulary conducted by Indonesian-speaking foreign vloggers.
Rima Rismaya, Sugeng Riyanto
doaj +1 more source
Geminate consonant grapheme-colour synaesthesia (ideaesthesia) [PDF]
Synaesthesia is a neurological condition which manifests clinically as an involuntary experience of a sensory or cognitive pathway upon stimulation of a second unrelated sensory or cognitive pathwayWe report a 55 year old male who presented with a life-long history of grapheme-colour synaesthesia in which the triggering grapheme was the double letter ...
Weaver, Donald F, Hawco, Cassandra L A
openaire +3 more sources

