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A dieresis denotes the separated pronunciation in English of two uncomfortably adjacent vowels.
Moreover, words may consist simply of vowels, words may begin with vowels, and words with adjacent vowels are not uncommon.
Semivowels were /y/ and /w/, consonantal variants of /i/ and /u/ that in certain positions in Modern Armenian have developed into the fricatives /h/ and /v/ or have merged with adjacent vowels.
Diaeresis, also spelled dieresis, (from Greek diairein, "to divide"), the resolution of one syllable into two, especially by separating the vowel elements of a diphthong and, by extension, two adjacent vowels.
The results, both numerically and perceptually, indicate that this model-based analysis strategy allows us to effectively and economically estimate the vocal tract shapes to synthesize accurate Thai vowels as well as smooth formant transitions between adjacent vowels.
There are a number of previous studies whose results have shown that the identification of fricative phonemes like /ʃ/ and /s/ is basically affected by context or signal-external factors like adjacent vowels, speaker gender, visual cues, and even perceived sexual orientation [53 55].
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Adjacent vowel sounds also produce good examples of different pronunciations for the same Portuguese word [19].
Furthermore, the results are discussed with respect to reaction-time measurements and an additional effect of the quality of the adjacent vowel phoneme on sibilant identification.
A further example of a misalignment between production and perception is subtracted phonetic variation that is erroneously reassigned to and perceptually integrated in the wrong speech unit, for example, the adjacent vowel instead of the adjacent consonant.
For the perception of stop voicing in general, voice onset time (VOT) is seen as one of the major acoustic cues in a variety of languages, the other major cues being stop duration and adjacent vowel duration [1 5].
The running together of adjacent short vowels and the disappearance of the semivowel digamma (a letter formerly existing in the Greek alphabet) are the most significant indications of this.
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