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Encyclopedia results for Syllabification

Syllabification





Encyclopedia results for Syllabification

  1. Syllabification

    Unreferenced date July 2007 Syllabification small Pronunciation small IPAc en s l b f k e n Respell s LA b fi KAY sh n or syllabication small Pronunciation small IPAc en s l b k e n Respell s LA bi KAY sh n is the separation of a word into syllable s, whether spoken or written. It is also used to describe the process of something like a consonant turning into a syllable, but this is not discussed here. For example, in American English regional differences North Central American English North Central American English , can is normally pronounced IPA k n , or even with the vowel reduced to a syllabification of the n itself. The written separation is usually marked by a hyphen when using English orthography e.g., syl la ble and with a period when transcribing in the IPA e.g., IPA s l. .b . For presentation purposes, typographer s may use an interpunct Unicode character U 00B7, e.g., syl la ble , or a special purpose hyphenation point U 2027, e.g., syl la ble . At the end of a line, a word is separated in writing into parts conventionally called syllables if it does not fit and if moving it to the next line would make the first line much shorter than the others. This can be a particular problem with very long words. Word processing has automated the process of justification typesetting justification , making syllabification of shorter words often superfluous. In some languages, the spoken syllables are also the basis of syllabification in writing ... spelling of modern English , written syllabification in English is based mostly on etymological ... to syllabify learning as lear ning according to the correct syllabification of the living language ... of English orthography accounts for such phenomena. English written syllabification therefore deals ... syllabification and even between dictionaries of the same English variety. In Finnish language Finnish ..., children are first taught to hyphenate every word until they produce the correct syllabification reliably ...   more details



  1. Hyphenation

    Hyphenation may refer to Hyphen , a punctuation mark Syllabification , the splitting of words in smaller units usually to achieve good line breaks in printed texts Hyphenation algorithm , an algorithm doing automatic syllabification Hyphenation analytical chemistry , the online coupling of analytical separation and detection technologies, e.g. Liquid chromatography mass spectrometry LC MS . See also Hyphen disambiguation disambig de Trennstelle ...   more details



  1. Dalit (poem)

    Unreferenced stub auto yes date December 2009 The dalit is a type of short Philippines Filipino poem, consisting of four lines with eight syllables each. There is a controversy regarding its origin. One school of thought states that the dalit is Spanish in origin, particularly because its syllabification is even or pares . Hence, it is said that the Spanish popularized the dalit in the Philippines. Another view holds that the dalit is indigenous, but the friars used its popularity to promote Catholicism , in the form of Meditative poetry meditative verses . See also Awit DEFAULTSORT Dalit Poem Category Philippine poetry Philippines stub Poetry stub ...   more details



  1. Steven Franks

    Infobox scientist name Steven Franks image filename only image size caption birth date birth place death date death place residence Bloomington, Indiana citizenship United Kingdom and United States nationality ethnicity fields Linguistics , Slavic Languages , Generative Grammar workplaces Indiana University alma mater Princeton University , UCLA , Cornell University doctoral advisor Wayles Browne academic advisors doctoral students Martina Proffe Lindseth, Sue Ellen Brown, Michael Yadroff, John Erickson, Karen Leigh Brown, Dorian Roehrs, Tosikazu Ikuta notable students known for Generative Syntax Works on Slavic Languages, Russian Re syllabification author abbrev bot author abbrev zoo influences influenced awards religion signature filename only footnotes Steven Franks is a British born American linguist and researcher in the fields of generative syntax syntax and slavic languages slavics . Franks has written numerous books that have significantly contributed to Slavic linguistics. He is currently a professor at of Linguistics, Slavic Languages and Literatures, and Cognitive Science, as well as an adjunct professor of Speech and Hearing Sciences and lives in Bloomington, Indiana with his family. External links http www.cogs.indiana.edu people homepages franks.html Official Website Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Franks, Steven ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Franks, Steven Category American linguists Category Living people ...   more details



  1. Sonority Sequencing Principle

    The Sonority Sequencing Principle SSP ref name Selkirk1984 Selkirk, E. 1984 . On the major class features and syllable theory. In Aronoff & Oehrle eds. Language Sound Structure Studies in Phonology. Cambridge MIT Press. 107 136. ref ref name Clements1990 Clements, G. N. 1990 . The role of the sonority cycle in core syllabification. In J. Kingston and M. E. Beckman eds. Papers in Laboratory Phonology I Between the grammar and the physics of speech. Cambridge Cambridge University Press. 283 333. ref is a phonotactic principle that aims to outline the structure of a syllable in terms of sonority . The SSP states that the center of a syllable, namely the syllable nucleus , often a vowel , constitutes a sonority peak that is preceded and or followed by a sequence of segments consonants with progressively decreasing sonority values i.e., the sonority has to fall toward both edges of the syllable . The sonority values of segments are determined by a sonority hierarchy . A good example for the SSP in English language English is the one syllable word trust The first consonant in the syllable onset is t , which is a stop consonant stop , the lowest on the sonority scale next is r , a liquid consonant liquid which is more sonorous, then we have the vowel u IPA en the sonority peak next, in the syllable coda , is s , a fricative , and last is another stop, t . Some languages possess syllables that violate the SSP Russian language Russian and English, for example while other languages strictly adhere to it, even requiring larger intervals on the sonority scale In Italian language Italian for example, a syllable initial stop must be followed by either a liquid, a semivowel glide or a vowel, but not by a fricative except ps borrowed words like pseudonimo, psicologia . Some languages allow a sonority plateau that is, two adjacent tautosyllabic consonants with the same sonority level. Modern Hebrew is an example of such language. Sources references Category Phonology Category Phon ...   more details



  1. Syllable

    Institute of Technology. ref Syllabification Main Syllabification Syllabification is the separation ... syllables are the basis of syllabification in writing too. Due to the very weak correspondence between sounds and letters in the spelling of modern English, for example, written syllabification in English .... Syllabification may also refer to the process of a consonant becoming a syllable nucleus. anchor ... home wells syllabif.htm argues that this is not a useful analysis, and that English syllabification ... system Syllabic consonant Syllabification Timing linguistics International Phonetic Alphabet Suprasegmentals ..., Mohamed title Syllabic consonants and syllabification in Imdlawn Tashlhiyt Berber journal Journal ... What is syllabification ? small SIL small http www2.let.uu.nl UiL OTS Lexicon zoek.pl?lemma syllabification Syllabification small Lexicon of Linguistics small http www.sil.org linguistics ...   more details



  1. Prenasalized consonant

    Malay. The syllabification of gaambar must be gaa.mbar then, and the syllabification of sambal sam.bal. ...   more details



  1. Harley 1775

    File BLHarley1775GospelsFol193.jpg thumb Folio 193 of British Library, Harley 1775, Gospel of Mark 10 45 49. British Library, Harley 1775 is an Illuminated manuscript illuminated Gospel Book produced in Italy during the last quarter of the 6th century. The text is in Latin and is a mixture of the Vulgate and Vetus Latina Old Latin translations. This text is called source Z in critical studies of the Latin New Testament . It is written in an uncial text with the running titles written in rustic capitals . The manuscript has enlarged initials and the opening lines of major text divisions are written in red. There are contemporary corrections in slanting uncial script which employ a Greek language Greek syllabification similar to that used by Victor of Capua . There are 468 vellum folios that are 177 by 120  mm. The text is written in a single column of 130 by 85  mm. Each Gospel is started on a new Paper quire quire . The quires are numbered so as to aid in the assembly of the codex . The manuscript s decoration includes eighteen canon table s under architectural arcades, display capitals, and a colophon decoration. There is a nineteenth canon table that is more simply decorated. On folio 11 there are Tironian notes in a 9th century France French hand. The manuscript was owned by Cardinal Mazarin d. 1668 . In the early 18th century it was in the Bibliotheque Nationale de France French Royal Library . It was stolen along with several other manuscripts in 1707 by Jean Aymon . It was purchased in Holland by Robert Harley, 1st Earl of Oxford and Earl Mortimer Robert Harley, 1st Earl of Oxford d. 1724 . It was sold by the widow of Edward Harley, 2nd Earl of Oxford and Earl Mortimer Edward Harley, 2nd Earl of Oxford and their daughter to Parliament of Great Britain Parliament as part of the Harley Collection which was one the founding collections of the British Museum . See also List of New Testament Latin manuscripts Further reading Brown, M. P. A Guide to Western ...   more details



  1. Nick Clements

    George N. Nick Clements October 5, 1940 August 30, 2009 was an American linguist theoretical linguist specializing in phonology . Clements was born in Cincinnati, Ohio , and educated in New Haven , Paris and London . He received his Ph.D. from the School of Oriental and African Studies , University of London , in 1973, defending a thesis on the Ewe language based on a year of field work in Ghana . He was a visiting scientist at M.I.T. 1973 75 and held appointments as professor at Harvard 1975 82 and Cornell 1982 91 before moving to the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique C.N.R.S. in Paris in 1992. He died of cancer in Chatham, Massachusetts , at the age of 68. ref Elizabeth Hume, 2009 08 31, http linguistlist.org issues 20 20 2937.html Obituary on LINGUIST list . Retrieved 2009 10 01. ref Clements main research was in phonology with a special focus on African languages . He is best known for his research in syllable syllable theory , tone linguistics tone and distinctive feature feature theory which have contributed to the modern theory of sound patterning in spoken language. At the time of his death, his work was concerned with the principles underlying speech sound inventories across languages. Books Clements, G. N. & S. J. Keyser, 1983. CV Phonology a Generative Theory of the Syllable Linguistic Inquiry Monograph 9 , MIT Press, Cambridge, Ma. Halle, Morris & G. N. Clements, 1983. Problem Book in Phonology . Cambridge, Ma. MIT Press and Bradford Books. Clements, G. N. & J. Goldsmith, eds., 1984. Autosegmental Studies in Bantu Tone . Berlin Mouton de Gruyter Other selected publications Clements, G. N., 1985. The Geometry of Phonological Features, Phonology Yearbook 2, 225 252 Clements, G. N., 1990. The Role of the Sonority Cycle in Core Syllabification. In John Kingston & M. Beckman, eds., Papers in Laboratory Phonology I , Cambridge Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, MA, pp. 283 333 Clements, G. N. & Elizabeth Hume, 1995. The Internal Organization of ...   more details



  1. Joseph Brookbank

    prayers in monosyllable s . Plain. Brief, and Pertinent Rules for the Judicious and Artificial Syllabification ...   more details



  1. Valley Yokuts

    Institute of Technology . Archangeli, Diana B. 1991 . Syllabification and prosodic templates in Yawelmani ... S. 1966 . Word classes in Yokuts. Lingua , 17 , 182 199. Noske, Roland. 1985 . Syllabification ... in Nonlinear Phonology , Dordrecht Foris, 335 361. Noske, Roland. 1993 . A Theory of Syllabification ...   more details



  1. Shva

    qal or not? Is the letter which is pointed with shva syllabification assigned to the preceding or to the following ... standard syllabification rowspan 5 colspan 4 attributes style font size x small background color ... letter with without Dagesh Dagesh Kal dagesh qal syllabification assigned to syllable style white ... syllabification , the letter under which a shva na is marked is grouped with the following syllable ... variants . Furthermore, in standard syllabification , the letter under which a Unicode shva na is marked ... letter bet . In standard syllabification , the letter under which a Unicode shva mera ef is marked ... kam ts . As with a shva na, standard Linguistic prescription prescribed syllabification determines ...   more details



  1. Sibawayh

    0356 4. Edzard, L. Sibawayhi s Observations on Assimilatory Processes and Re Syllabification in the Light ...   more details



  1. Michael Kenstowicz

    . Sonority Driven Stress 1994. Syllabification in Chuckchee a Constraint based Analysis 1989. Tone ...   more details



  1. Consonant cluster

    Refimprove date April 2008 IPA notice lang en In linguistics , a consonant cluster or consonant blend is a group of consonant s which have no intervening vowel . In English, for example, the groups IPA spl and IPA ts are consonant clusters in the word splits . Some linguists argue that the term can only be properly applied to those consonant clusters that occur within one syllable . Others contend that the concept is more useful when it includes consonant sequences across syllable boundaries. According to the former definition, the longest consonant clusters in the word extra would be IPA ks and IPA tr , ref J.C. Wells, http www.phon.ucl.ac.uk home wells syllabif.htm Syllabification and allophony ref whereas the latter allows IPA kstr . The German language German word Angstschwei IPA a st va s fear sweat is another good example, with a cluster of five consonants IPA st v . Phonotactics Languages phonotactics differ as to what consonant clusters they permit. Many languages forbid consonant clusters altogether. Maori language Maori and Pirah language Pirah , for instance, forbid any two consecutive consonants in a word. Japanese language Japanese is almost as strict, but allows clusters of consonant plus IPA j as in Tokyo IPA ja to kjo , the name of Japan s capital city. Across a syllable boundary, it also allows a sequence of a nasal stop plus another consonant, as in Honsh IPA hon u the name of the largest island and tempura IPA tempu a a traditional dish . A great many languages are more restrictive than English in terms of consonant clusters almost every Malayo Polynesian language forbids consonant clusters entirely. Tahitian language Tahitian , Samoan language Samoan and Hawaiian language Hawaiian are all of this sort. Standard Arabic forbids initial consonant clusters and more than two consecutive consonants in other positions. So do most other Semitic languages , although Modern Israeli Hebrew permits initial two consonant clusters e.g. pkak cap dlat pum ...   more details



  1. Miyako language

    , though CCV and CVV are found, as above. Syllabification is difficult to analyze, especially in words ...   more details



  1. Syllable weight

    syllabification . In a consonant cluster, one consonant ends the preceding syllable and the rest ...   more details



  1. Blue House

    other uses Infobox Korean name img Korea Seoul Blue House Cheongwadae Reception Center 0688 269 07 cropped.jpg caption Reception Center at the Blue House hangul hanja linktext rr Cheong wadae mr Ch ng wadae The Cheongwadae lit. a platform with azure tiled roof or Blue House commonly syllabification syllabicated Cheong Wa Dae ref Romanization by the official website http english.president.go.kr english.president.go.kr ref ref Cite news title Cheong Wa Dae rules out renegotiation of FTA with US location Seoul publisher Yonhap News Agency date 20 November 2009 url http english.yonhapnews.co.kr national 2009 11 20 42 0301000000AEN20091120003400320F.HTML accessdate 12 Dec., 2009 ref ref Cite news title Cheong Wa Dae Aims to End Graft in Defense Procurement newspaper Chosun Ilbo location Seoul date 09 December, 2009 url http english.chosun.com site data html dir 2009 12 09 2009120900527.html accessdate 12 Dec., 2009 ref is the executive office and official residence of the South Korean head of state, the President of the Republic of Korea and located in capital city Seoul . The Korean name literally translates to pavilion of blue tiles. The Blue House is in fact a complex of buildings, built largely in the traditional Korean architecture Korean architectural style with some modern elements. Built upon the site of the royal garden of Joseon Dynasty , the Blue House now consists of the Main Office Hall , the Presidential Residence, the State Reception House , the Chunchugwan Press Hall, and the Secretariat Buildings. The entire complex covers approximately 250,000 square metres or 62 acres . History The location of Cheongwadae was the site of a royal villa in what was then Seoul Hanyang , the southern capital of the Goryeo dynasty 918 1392 . It was built by Sukjong of Goryeo King Sukjong r. 1095 1105 in 1104. Goryeo s principal capital was at Kaesong Kaes ng , and it also maintained a western capital at Pyongyang and an eastern capital at Gy ...   more details



  1. Yurok language

    October year 2003 title The phonology of Yurok glottalized sonorants Segmental fission under syllabification ...   more details



  1. Gibberish (language game)

    reduction reduced if unstressed according to English stress rules. The IPA syllabification syllabifies ...   more details



  1. Obligatory Contour Principle

    surname Steriade given Donca year 1982 title Greek prosodies and the nature of syllabification ...   more details



  1. Bert Vaux

    Samuels , Phonology journal Phonology 22 395 436, 2005. Syllabification in Armenian, Universal ...   more details



  1. Jan-Olof Svantesson

    , Jan Olof 1995. Cyclic syllabification in Mongolian . Natural Language and Linguistic Theory 13 755 ...   more details



  1. Sievers' law

    100 of the time in the environments where his theory called for the syllabification of the PIE ... in line initial position, i.e., in only one of the four environments calling for syllabification ...   more details



  1. Portuguese orthography

    with the same syllable accented in Portuguese and Spanish . Syllabification and collation Portuguese syllabification rules require a syllable break between double letters cc , c , mm , nn , rr , ss , or other ...   more details




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