Prosodic Phonology: The Theory and Its Application to Language Acquisition and Speech ProcessingGrevatt & Grevatt, 1987 - 162 pages |
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Page 67
... patterns : there was thus an in- crease in complexity . At the start , each word appeared to be learnt as an individual item and the first of any particular pattern seemed to be learnt on a pho- netic basis , as described earlier - i.e ...
... patterns : there was thus an in- crease in complexity . At the start , each word appeared to be learnt as an individual item and the first of any particular pattern seemed to be learnt on a pho- netic basis , as described earlier - i.e ...
Page 116
... pattern is the basis for production , the specification has to be completed in some way . The problem is overcome by ... pattern , PVPVN , instead of ( PV ) 2 . The new specification for the LR2 pattern is as follows : it now has a final ...
... pattern is the basis for production , the specification has to be completed in some way . The problem is overcome by ... pattern , PVPVN , instead of ( PV ) 2 . The new specification for the LR2 pattern is as follows : it now has a final ...
Page 135
... pattern is found to match , it is then paired with a pattern at LR2 and the word is recognized . If there is no match at LR1 , a new pattern has to be constructed at both levels of representation . The patterns are very simple at first ...
... pattern is found to match , it is then paired with a pattern at LR2 and the word is recognized . If there is no match at LR1 , a new pattern has to be constructed at both levels of representation . The patterns are very simple at first ...
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