Results 301 to 310 of about 143,296 (334)
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Journal of Linguistics, 1969
Kohler (1966a, 1966b: 346–348) asks whether the syllable is a phonological universal, and concludes negatively.1The way to support such a conclusion is not difficult to imagine: the sort of specific objections to the syllable which Kohler raises would, if well-founded, be sufficient to prove his case.
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Kohler (1966a, 1966b: 346–348) asks whether the syllable is a phonological universal, and concludes negatively.1The way to support such a conclusion is not difficult to imagine: the sort of specific objections to the syllable which Kohler raises would, if well-founded, be sufficient to prove his case.
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2007
Abstract Syllable boundaries in Chinese are mostly unambiguous, regardless of the dialect. The majority of Chinese words are monosyllabic. The maximal size of a syllable in SC is either CGVV or CGVC, where C is a consonant, G a glide, and VV either a long vowel or a diphthong.
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Abstract Syllable boundaries in Chinese are mostly unambiguous, regardless of the dialect. The majority of Chinese words are monosyllabic. The maximal size of a syllable in SC is either CGVV or CGVC, where C is a consonant, G a glide, and VV either a long vowel or a diphthong.
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1999
Part 1 General issues: theories of the syllable, Harry van der Hulst, Nancy A. Ritter morpheme structure constraints and the phonotactics of Dutch, Geert Booij syllables in Danish, Hans Basboll the syllable in Hindi, Manjari Ohala. Part 2 Government phonology: head-driven phonology, Harry van der Hulst, Nancy A.
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Part 1 General issues: theories of the syllable, Harry van der Hulst, Nancy A. Ritter morpheme structure constraints and the phonotactics of Dutch, Geert Booij syllables in Danish, Hans Basboll the syllable in Hindi, Manjari Ohala. Part 2 Government phonology: head-driven phonology, Harry van der Hulst, Nancy A.
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1994
Abstract The child’s earliest vocalizations consist of vowel-like sounds; consonant like sounds appear from about two months of age. Consonants and vowels begin to combine into appropriately timed syllable-like sequences around seven months (Oller 1980); it has been suggested that in the earliest stage there is no neuromuscular activity ...
A M Devine, Laurence D Stephens
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Abstract The child’s earliest vocalizations consist of vowel-like sounds; consonant like sounds appear from about two months of age. Consonants and vowels begin to combine into appropriately timed syllable-like sequences around seven months (Oller 1980); it has been suggested that in the earliest stage there is no neuromuscular activity ...
A M Devine, Laurence D Stephens
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Emphasis on the First Syllable
Pediatrics in Review, 20191. Joseph A. Zenel, MD 1. Editor-in-Chief, Pediatrics in Review 2. Sanford Children's Hospital, The Sanford School of Medicine, University of South Dakota, Sioux Falls, SD “Emphasis on the first syllable. Rhymes with kennel.” This is my well-seasoned response when asked how to pronounce my last name.
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Syllable recognition using syllable-segment statistics and syllable-based HMM
7th International Conference on Spoken Language Processing (ICSLP 2002), 2002Nobutoshi Takahashi, Seiichi Nakagawa
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