Results 231 to 240 of about 679,247 (301)
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2002
The sounds of language can be divided into consonants, vowels, and tones - the use of pitch to convey word meaning. Seventy percent of the world's languages use pitch in this way. Assuming little or no prior knowledge of the topic, this textbook provides a clearly organized introduction to tone and tonal phonology.
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The sounds of language can be divided into consonants, vowels, and tones - the use of pitch to convey word meaning. Seventy percent of the world's languages use pitch in this way. Assuming little or no prior knowledge of the topic, this textbook provides a clearly organized introduction to tone and tonal phonology.
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Proceedings of the Workshop on Challenges and Opportunities of Efficient and Performant Storage Systems, 2022
Yong Zhang, Xinran Xiong, Oana Balmau
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Yong Zhang, Xinran Xiong, Oana Balmau
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1999
Abstract An account of the primary elements of the musical experience, arguing that rhythm, accent, melody, harmony, and movement are all features of the intentional object of musical perception (‘tone’) but not features of the material object (‘sound’) in which that intentional object is heard.
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Abstract An account of the primary elements of the musical experience, arguing that rhythm, accent, melody, harmony, and movement are all features of the intentional object of musical perception (‘tone’) but not features of the material object (‘sound’) in which that intentional object is heard.
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2016
When the phonological form of a morpheme—a unit of meaning that cannot be decomposed further into smaller units of meaning—involves a particular melodic pattern as part of its sound shape, this morpheme is specified for tone. In view of this definition, phrase- and utterance-level melodies—also known as intonation—are not to be interpreted as instances
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When the phonological form of a morpheme—a unit of meaning that cannot be decomposed further into smaller units of meaning—involves a particular melodic pattern as part of its sound shape, this morpheme is specified for tone. In view of this definition, phrase- and utterance-level melodies—also known as intonation—are not to be interpreted as instances
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Single tone parameter estimation from discrete-time observations
IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, 1974D. Rife, R. Boorstyn
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ACM Transactions on Graphics, 2017
Yuki Endo, Yoshihiro Kanamori, J. Mitani
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Yuki Endo, Yoshihiro Kanamori, J. Mitani
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