Checked Vowels
   HOME
*





Checked Vowels
In phonetics and phonology, checked vowels are those that commonly stand in a stress (linguistics), stressed closed syllable; and free vowels are those that can stand in either a stressed closed syllable or a stressed open syllable. Usage The terms ''checked vowel'' and ''free vowel'' originated in English language, English phonetics and phonology. They are seldom used for the description of other languages, even though a distinction between vowels that usually have to be followed by a consonant and other vowels is common in most Germanic languages. The terms ''checked vowel'' and ''free vowel'' correspond closely to the terms tenseness, ''lax vowel'' and ''tense vowel'' respectively, but many linguists prefer to use the terms ''checked'' and ''free'', as there is no clearcut phonetic definition of vowel tenseness and because by most attempted definitions of tenseness and are considered lax, even though they behave in American English as free vowels. ''Checked vowels'' is als ...
[...More Info...]      
[...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]  


picture info

Phonetics
Phonetics is a branch of linguistics that studies how humans produce and perceive sounds, or in the case of sign languages, the equivalent aspects of sign. Linguists who specialize in studying the physical properties of speech are phoneticians. The field of phonetics is traditionally divided into three sub-disciplines based on the research questions involved such as how humans plan and execute movements to produce speech (articulatory phonetics), how various movements affect the properties of the resulting sound (acoustic phonetics), or how humans convert sound waves to linguistic information (auditory phonetics). Traditionally, the minimal linguistic unit of phonetics is the phone—a speech sound in a language which differs from the phonological unit of phoneme; the phoneme is an abstract categorization of phones. Phonetics deals with two aspects of human speech: production—the ways humans make sounds—and perception—the way speech is understood. The communicative modali ...
[...More Info...]      
[...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]  



MORE