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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
  • 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
  • In IPA transcription, what is the difference between “ɪ”, i, “i:”?
    Phonemic transcription IS the IPA's original intended use since 1888 And since narrowness is a continuum, even in allophonic transcriptions you can never tell what sound each symbol represents without acquainting yourself with the underlying conventions either
  • 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
  • Pronunciation of w at the end of a word - and what does ʊ mean?
    Since the phonemic transcriptions used by dictionaries are supposed to correspond at least loosely to the phones used in actual speech, some dictionaries use different symbols, əʊ and oʊ , when representing that phoneme in British and American English, respectively, though this is often more a matter of convention than phonetic accuracy
  • Why phonemic symbols are different between dictionaries
    I find the phonemic symbols are different for the same word between dictionaries Take the word quot;tuck quot; for example In Oxford Learner's Dictionary, its tʌk for both British English and
  • pronunciation - What are common words in which written ‹i› is . . .
    Phonemic ai is written í in this list Phonemic i is written î in this list Phonemic ɪ is written ì in this list Phonemic ɚ is written ï in this list (If a written ‹i› corresponds to no vowel at all, then it is marked without a dot or any diacritic so that it is represented by ı in the list below )
  • 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?
  • phonemes - English minimal pair for uː and ʊ in which uː is . . .
    The use of u in English phonemic transcriptions is somewhat problematic and an abuse of notation, as this unstressed vowel is not a third phoneme in contrast with ʊ and uː ; rather, it may be intended as a simple notational shorthand for 'either the phoneme ʊ or the phoneme uː ' (which we could call a "diaphonemic" transcription
  • Is the underlying form of n n or ŋ in words ending in -nk?
    Almost all the dictionaries for Modern English words ending in -nk give their phonemic transcription with -ŋk My question is: has the phonemic n changed to ŋ or is it still n but dictionaries write it ŋ ?





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