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9 results for "phonology"
ZG_3_11 — Phonology: Sound Systems, Distinctive Features, and Phonological Rules
Phonology — the branch of linguistics concerned with the systematic organization of speech sounds in natural languages — studies not the physical sounds themselves (that is phonetics) but the abstract cognitive system by
ZG_3_21 — Tone Languages & Cognition
Tone languages — languages in which the pitch pattern of a syllable determines or changes its lexical meaning — are spoken by more than half of the world's population, though they are frequently overlooked in linguistic
ZG_3_03 — Phonetics and the International Phonetic Alphabet
Phonetics is the scientific study of speech sounds — how they are produced by the human vocal tract (articulatory phonetics), how they propagate as acoustic signals (acoustic phonetics), and how they are perceived by the
ZG_4_20 — Sign Language Linguistics & Deaf Culture
Sign languages are fully developed natural languages with complete phonological, morphological, syntactic, and semantic systems — not manual codes for spoken languages, not pantomime, and not universal. There are over 30
ZG_4_02 — Sign Language — Gestural Communication and Deaf Culture
Sign languages are fully developed natural languages that use the visual-gestural modality — hands, face, body, and spatial relationships — instead of the auditory-vocal channel to express the same range of linguistic co
ZG_3_16 — Sign Language Typology: Structure, Diversity, and the Linguistics of Gesture
Sign languages — natural human languages that use the visual-gestural modality rather than the vocal-auditory channel — are among the most powerful demonstrations that human linguistic capacity is not bound to speech. Th
ZG_1_18 — Sound Symbolism and Phonosemantics
Sound symbolism — the non-arbitrary association between speech sounds and meaning — challenges the foundational Saussurean principle that the relationship between a word's form and its meaning is entirely arbitrary (Ferd
ZG_3_00 — Linguistic Theory Structure: Subfolder Summary
ZG_3_13 — Clicks and Rare Phonemes: Extreme Sounds of Human Speech
The human vocal tract is capable of producing an extraordinary range of speech sounds — far more than any single language uses. The International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) catalogs over 100 consonant symbols and 28 vowel s
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