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phonemic    
a. 音素的

音素的

phonemic
adv 1: by phonemics; "phonemically transcribed"
adj 1: of or relating to phonemes of a particular language;
"phonemic analysis"

phonemic \pho*ne"mic\ (f[-o]*n[=e]"m[i^]k), adj. (Linguistics)
Of or pertaining to a phoneme; as, phonemic analysis.
[WordNet 1.5]

104 Moby Thesaurus words for "phonemic":
accented, alveolar, apical, apico-alveolar, apico-dental,
articulated, assimilated, back, barytone, bilabial, broad,
cacuminal, central, cerebral, checked, close, consonant,
consonantal, continuant, dental, descriptive, dissimilated, dorsal,
flat, front, glide, glossal, glottal, glottochronological,
grammatic, graphemic, guttural, hard, heavy, high, intonated,
labial, labiodental, labiovelar, lateral, lax, lexicographic,
lexicological, lexicostatistical, light, lingual, linguistic,
liquid, low, metalinguistic, mid, monophthongal, morphological,
morphophonemic, muted, narrow, nasal, nasalized, occlusive, open,
oxytone, palatal, palatalized, pharyngeal, pharyngealized,
philological, phonetic, phonic, phonological, pitch, pitched,
posttonic, psycholinguistic, retroflex, rounded, semantic,
semivowel, soft, sonant, stopped, stressed, strong, structural,
surd, syllabic, syntactic, tense, thick, throaty, tonal, tonic,
twangy, unaccented, unrounded, unstressed, velar, vocalic, vocoid,
voiced, voiceless, vowel, vowellike, weak, wide


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  • What is the difference between phonetic and phonemic?
    Phonemics, or Phonology, is the study of the distribution of sound systems in human languages A Phoneme is a particular set of sounds produced in a particular language and distinguishable by native speakers of that language from other (sets of) sounds in that language That's what "distinctive" means -- the English phonemes n and ŋ can be told apart by native speakers of English, because
  • phonetics - What did we gain in return for the loss of phonemic vowel . . .
    And yet, Latin’s predictable stress was also replaced with a new phonemic stress in Spanish; for example, término, termino, terminó are a minimal triple Did the same thing happen to Old English as happened to Latin, as the short-vs-long vowel distinction was lost but phonemic stress was gained, or is it completely unrelated?
  • phonetics - The ɪ sound vs the i sound - exact difference . . .
    See "The Undesirability of length marks in EFL phonemic transcription", (1975), by Jack Windsor Lewis Especially in transcriptions of American English, it's common to represent the vowel in peat as i
  • Is there such a thing as pangram for phonemes?
    Thanks for the great practical mnemonic, though the claim that "of", "must", and "learn" contain three different vowels deserves discussion; the first two may simply be the unstressed versus the stressed phonetic realization of the central ("schwa") vowel, while the third might be treated as a syllabic-r phonetic realization of a phonemic schwa
  • Why phonemic symbols are different between dictionaries
    1 I find the phonemic symbols are different for the same word between dictionaries Take the word "tuck" for example In Oxford Learner's Dictionary, its tʌk for both British English and North American English However, in Kindle's dictionary which is The New Oxford American Dictionary, it's tək
  • Psychology of diphthongs - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    The three phonemic diphthongs are the only ones that "count": ɔɪ and aʊ and aɪ Everything else is a non-phonemic phonetic effect that varies between between regions, speakers, and utterances
  • What is the phonetic term for consecutive sounded vowels?
    This is called hiatus: two consecutive vowel sounds in separate syllables; as opposed to diphthong, two consecutive vowel sounds in the same syllable In hiatus, the vowel sounds need not be different, though it is rare for language to actually distinguish between two hiatus of the same vowel, and a long vowel: e g , [e e] vs [ee]
  • orthography - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Alphabetic writing systems use graphemes to represent phonemes But in their “Psychology of Reading” chapter of 2003’s Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science, researchers Simon Garrod and Meredyth Daneman
  • phonetics - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    I was given a task to define the types of the phoneme distribution in these words: tea [tiː] – stay [steɪ] – try [traɪ] – twice [twaɪs] – little [ˈlɪtl] But I have no idea how to do that Could you
  • pronunciation - Could you clarify e and ɛ ? - English Language . . .
    The phonemic forms of the two examples I've mentioned, I take to be bɛj "bay" and bɛti "Betty" In classical phonemics, minimal pairs have a special significance





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