Exact(3)
In a pronunciation prefix tree based LVCSR decoder, such as the one we used in this article, the acoustic states near word-ends have fewer opportunities to be evaluated because the active search space near the word-ends normally have been extensively pruned.
In fact, PoS categorization is insufficient to disambiguate entries in a pronunciation dictionary.
But Belkin isn't the only one in a pronunciation quandary, and neither is Los Feliz.
Similar(57)
"The confusion of yur-A-nus began when some high school teachers were afraid that students would titter at the correct pronunciation". These teachers wanted to avoid the sound of the first two syllables, and caused a pronunciation in which the last two syllables were stressed.
For example, such a pronunciation in the case of "Prot" (instead of "Brot" – bread) may have led to a NO response or to repeated processing before arriving at a YES response.
Meanwhile, in the Republic of China Taiwann), GR survived until the 1970s as a pronunciation aid in monolingual dictionaries such as Gwoyeu Tsyrdean [Guóyǔ Cídiǎn] and Tsyrhuey [Cíhuì], but was officially replaced in 1986 by a modified form known as Mandarin Phonetic Symbols II.
This resulted in a pure pronunciation that was marvelled at by the French people when she visited France many years later.
Inspired by J.K. Rowling's occasional plot twists -- revealed on social media long after the series has satisfyingly concluded -- you've decided to re-read Harry Potter, swapping in a new pronunciation of "Voldermort," or a new interpretation of Snape's character.
"Part of the problem is that we've been literate for so long," said Graham Pointon, a pronunciation adviser in the BBC's pronunciation department.
That's a pronunciation everyone in this packed room would know.
The first is between retroflex consonants (pronounced with the tongue touching the roof of the mouth, giving a hard sound of the kind associated with Indian pronunciations of words like 'doctor'), and dental consonants (pronounced with the tongue touching the upper teeth, giving a soft sound as in an Italian pronunciation of 'Italia').
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com