Results 41 to 50 of about 1,788 (215)
Baradian Ways With Words and Their Ethical Implications for Sociolinguistics
ABSTRACT My response addresses the relationship between scholarly writing practices (in sociolinguistics) and ethics as response‐ability, approached through Barad's unique ways with words. Barad's work is based on the entanglement of ethics, ontology, and epistemology—ethico‐onto‐epistemology—which aligns with relational views of ontology and ethics ...
Lara‐Stephanie Krause‐Alzaidi
wiley +1 more source
Implications of Vowel Diphthong Distortions
: Clinical records of 42 children with functional articulation disorders characterized by vowel and diphthong distortion were studied to reveal any peculiar features of this group.
Blanche L. Serwer +3 more
core +1 more source
The search for linguistically coherent accents: Unsupervised clustering of diphthong variation in Southeast England [PDF]
Linguistic research refers to many related accents in Southeast England: Standard Southern British English (SSBE), Received Pronunciation (RP), Estuary English (EE), Cockney and Multicultural London English (MLE).
Strycharczuk, Patrycja; id_orcid +2 more
core +1 more source
Anti-hiatus tendencies in Spanish: rate of occurrence and phonetic identification
Spanish normative grammar considers any two-vowel combination of /e/, /a/, and /o/ as a hiatus, accepting that they can be pronounced as a diphthong in lower basilects and/or informal registers.
Herrero de Haro Alfredo +1 more
doaj +1 more source
Forming the Terminology of Russian Phonetics: Diftong ‘Diphthong’
The aim of the article is to describe the history of the occurrence of the term diftong ‘diphthong’ and its synonymous nominations in the terminological system of Russian linguistics, to analyze linguists’ points of view on diphthong as a sound ...
Andrey V. Ivanov
doaj +1 more source
Abstract The current study examined how children apply their phonological knowledge to recognize translation equivalents in a foreign language. Target words for recognition were either phonologically similar (cognate) or dissimilar (noncognate) to words they already knew in their first language.
Katie Von Holzen, Rochelle S. Newman
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT The troves of speech data that have driven an increasing orientation towards large‐scale methods in linguistics have been, for the most part, available only to closed teams of researchers and their collaborators. The Archive of Pittsburgh Language and Speech (APLS, https://apls.pitt.edu) is a new open data resource, consisting of nearly 46 h ...
Dan Villarreal +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Monophthongization of central diphthongs
English is a global language, learned worldwide as a native, first, and second language. In Azerbaijan, Received Pronunciation (RP) is considered the best accent for teaching English, but its model is outdated and requires revision.
Parvana jafarova
doaj +1 more source
Abstract This study investigates the lexicographical potential of Medieval Latin documentation from the Venetian area of the Italo‐Romance domain, highlighting the need for a systematic approach to bridge Latin and vernacular linguistic developments. The project MEDITA – Medieval Latin Documentation and Digital Italo‐Romance Lexicography.
Jacopo Gesiot
wiley +1 more source
The main purpose of this study was to examine Animated Trapezium to teach the English Diphthongs as one of some important and complicated aspects, the articulation of diphthongs is often treated as the “stepchild of language learning aspects” compared to
Arif Rahman
doaj +1 more source

