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The rule concerning voiceless stops' being aspirated in some circumstances and unaspirated in others refers to the subset of phonemes that are both voiceless sounds and stops.
Similarly, the variations in vowel length in cat and cad can be expressed with reference to the set of phonemes that are vowels, and also to the set that comprises both voiceless sounds and stops.
There were approximately 23 consonants, which included voiceless plosives (i.e., /p/, /t/, /k/); voiced plosives (i.e., /b/, /d/, /g/); voiceless fricatives (i.e., /f/, /s/, /o/, /x/, /h/); voiced fricatives (i.e., /v/, /z/, /zh/, /y/); nasals (/n/, /m/); and affricates both voiceless (/c/) and voiced (/j/).
Over the 10 discrete stop closure landmarks (x-axis), shown for both voiceless velar stop /k/ and voiced velar stop /ɡ/ in medial position.
Figure 2 presents the complete voicing profiles over all EP and Italian speakers for both voiceless and voiced velar stop in medial position.
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For voiceless plosives, both the bilinguals and monolinguals used a long lag (mean /p/, monolinguals = 54 ms; bilinguals = 49 ms; mean /k/, monolinguals = 79 ms, bilinguals = 59 ms).
The liquid consonant l and the nasal m, n, ng (as in "sing") are normally voiced in English, and the stops, fricatives, and affricates characteristically possess both voiced and voiceless forms.
As for what the show runners saw in her after that robot-funky chicken production, they said they "needed an actress who could convincingly embody both the timid, voiceless Dany we first meet, and the Mother of Dragons she later becomes.
When comparing the two languages, it can be seen that, throughout the complete stop closure, both the EP and Italian voiceless consonants /k/ show nearly identical extinction of voicing.
(Latin, having lost the voice in initial position, subsequently changed both of the resultant voiceless aspirates into the fricative f, and it lost the aspiration in medial position).
In one group of languages, the labial component is assumed to have been lost, and in another group the velar component; it is only in the Latin reflex of the voiceless *kw that both labiality and velarity are retained (compare Latin quis from *kwi-).
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