<--- Back to Details
First PageDocument Content
Tone / Vowels / Phonology / Phonetics / Phonotactics / Syllable / Pitch accent / Second-language phonology / Ancient Greek phonology
Date: 2016-02-02 06:05:49
Tone
Vowels
Phonology
Phonetics
Phonotactics
Syllable
Pitch accent
Second-language phonology
Ancient Greek phonology

Phonological conditioning of peak alignment

Add to Reading List

Source URL: www.lel.ed.ac.uk

Download Document from Source Website

File Size: 565,68 KB

Share Document on Facebook

Similar Documents

“Sagging transitions” between high pitch accents in English: experimental evidence D. R. Ladd and Astrid Schepman* Edinburgh University *University of Abertay Dundee

“Sagging transitions” between high pitch accents in English: experimental evidence D. R. Ladd and Astrid Schepman* Edinburgh University *University of Abertay Dundee

DocID: 1r02t - View Document

Feature Sets for the Automatic Detection of Prosodic Prominence Tim Mahrt, Jui-Ting Huang, Yoonsook Mo, Jennifer Cole, Mark Hasegawa-Johnson, and Margaret Fleck Beckman Institute, University of Illinois

Feature Sets for the Automatic Detection of Prosodic Prominence Tim Mahrt, Jui-Ting Huang, Yoonsook Mo, Jennifer Cole, Mark Hasegawa-Johnson, and Margaret Fleck Beckman Institute, University of Illinois

DocID: 1qUad - View Document

The reality of phonological forms: a rejoinder

The reality of phonological forms: a rejoinder

DocID: 1qPVc - View Document

Microsoft Word - bls34_mo_3

Microsoft Word - bls34_mo_3

DocID: 1qNvR - View Document

Microsoft PowerPoint - lsa_poster5_2

Microsoft PowerPoint - lsa_poster5_2

DocID: 1qL9f - View Document