phonemic transcription उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- A phonetic transcription ( based on phones ) is enclosed within square brackets ( [ ] ) rather than the slashes ( / / ) of a phonemic transcription ( based on phonemes ).
- IPA is very flexible, allowing for a wide variety of transcriptions between broad phonemic transcriptions which describe the significant units of meaning in language, and phonetic transcriptions which may indicate every nuance of sound in detail.
- According to the guidelines originally passed at Kiel, Computer Representation of Individual Languages ( CRIL ) must have : a digital speech signal, a narrow phonetic or broad phonemic transcription and finally a phonemic citation form.
- The / . . . / indicate already that it's the IPA style phonemic transcription, clicking on it would play the file . & minus; Woodstone 07 : 20, 2005 Apr 11 ( UTC)
- IPA symbols are composed of one or more elements of two basic types, broad or phonemic transcription; thus, is less specific than, and could refer to, either or, depending on the context and language.
- Both methods can use the same sets of symbols, but linguists usually denote phonemic transcriptions by enclosing them in slashes / . . . /, while phonetic transcriptions are enclosed in square brackets [ . . . ].
- Since the dictionary was produced by typesetting until the 15th Edition, any substantial revision involved a considerable amount of work and expense, but Gimson introduced a new style of phonemic transcription for the 13th Edition, published in 1967.
- For "'foreign-language "'pronunciations, a phonemic transcriptions are used, these require a link to a description of the phonology of the language in question, as otherwise the symbols used may be ambiguous.
- Roughly speaking, a phonemic transcription only marks enough to make the sounds unambiguous to an speaker of the language ( here, English ), but ignores details which are not significant for that language, though they might be for other languages.
- I do not understand how you get from the undisputed fact that phonemic transcriptions are not entirely phonetically accurate to the conclusion that phonemic transcriptions do not have content ( and that we are therefore free to deliberately invent our own transcription conventions ).