Prosodic Phonology: The Theory and Its Application to Language Acquisition and Speech ProcessingGrevatt & Grevatt, 1987 - 162 pages |
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Page 6
... basis of the hierarchy of techniques for the statement of meanings ' ( Firth 1950 : 183 ) . Briefly the context of situation brings into relation three categories ( Firth 1950 : 182 ) : 1 ) the participants and their verbal and non ...
... basis of the hierarchy of techniques for the statement of meanings ' ( Firth 1950 : 183 ) . Briefly the context of situation brings into relation three categories ( Firth 1950 : 182 ) : 1 ) the participants and their verbal and non ...
Page 72
... basis for future research may emerge and it is in the same spirit that a ten- tative hypothesis is now proposed of how a child acquires the phonologi- cal system of his mother tongue . The points are numbered for con- venience of ...
... basis for future research may emerge and it is in the same spirit that a ten- tative hypothesis is now proposed of how a child acquires the phonologi- cal system of his mother tongue . The points are numbered for con- venience of ...
Page 135
... basis of auditorily salient features of the acoustic signal of speech as noted above , and are stored at LR1 for future matching when other such patterns are again synthesized in the process of speech recognition . The patterns of LR1 ...
... basis of auditorily salient features of the acoustic signal of speech as noted above , and are stored at LR1 for future matching when other such patterns are again synthesized in the process of speech recognition . The patterns of LR1 ...
Contents
An Introduction to the Theory | 4 |
Illustration of Analysis | 15 |
A Prosodic View | 25 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
acoustic signal acquired acquisition adult forms adult models alveolar analysis articulatory auditory babu bæbu basic features bilabial child language child's and adult's child's forms close vowel complexity consonant consonantal context continuance contrasts CVCV dada differential features disyllabic examples Firth formant fricative function words gɔn increase interpretation labial structure lable language development length less salient levels of representation linguistic lip-rounding LR1 and LR2 mama manner of articulation match nasal stops non-rounding onset and ending onset of syllable open vowel Paper perceives phonological system place of articulation plosive produced prosodic phonology pupu recognition reduplicated relation repetition salient features second syllable segmental semantic sequence sibilant sounds spectrograms speech perception speech processing stage structure words syllable features syllable onsets syllable structure syntagmatic syntax theory trasts ture two-syllable words type of structure voiced onset voiceless vowel grade Waterson word patterns word structures