something else) Simile: A comparison between two things where one thing is said to be “like” or “as” another. Personification: When non-living things‚ objects and concepts are given human characteristics. Alliteration: Repetition of the same consonant sound at the beginning of several words in close succession. Assonance: Repetition of the same vowel sound in a sentence to create internal rhyming. Onomatopoeia: Words that imitate or suggest the sound that they are describing (Bang‚ splash‚ pop
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Pied Beauty 	The poem "Pied Beauty" begins by praising God for all the colorful and diverse things in nature. The speaker is thankful for everything with dots‚ circles‚ different colors‚ etc. He seems to be fond of nature and "the great outdoors." Many of the images in the poem made me think of camping out‚ or a picnic. For example‚ fresh fire-coal‚ chestnut falls‚ finches‚ skies of two colors‚ cows‚ etc. But the poem does not only speak of natures’ diversity. It also makes
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h‚ l‚ r‚ j‚ w c. Affricatives – plosion+friction – tš‚ dž D) a. Nasal consonant – m‚ n‚ nosové n b. Oral consonant – the rest Voiced – lenis – b‚ d‚ dž‚ g‚ v‚ th‚ z‚ ž‚ m‚ n‚ nasal n‚ h‚ l‚ r‚ w‚ j Voiceless – fortis – p‚ t‚ tš‚ k‚ f‚ th‚ s‚ š Vocalic quantity Czech – absolute vocalic quantity English – relative vocalic quantity‚ dependent on the surrounding environment An important role played by the consonant following the vowel ( V C ) Voiceless C causes a comparative shortening
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LANGUAGE CONSISTS OF VOWELS AND CONSONANTS Language consists of vowels and consonants. That sentence may contain some truth‚ but when we talk about language‚ we can not say that consists of vowels and consonants only. Language is a system for encoding and decoding information. However‚ there are different kinds of ways to communicate and‚ we as human beings are not the only ones who have the ability to do it. Vowels and consonants are related to speech. On the other hand‚ language
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MUSICAL INSTRUMENT IN MINDORO MAR JOSHUA C. RAFAEL VII-KNOWLEDGE MRS.LOURDES SIOBAL * Strings * The kudlung is a form of zither. It is a stringed instrument having the body of a single piece of bamboo. The strings are composed of strips raised from its outer skin and bridged in place to produce various pitches. The kudlong is a two-stringed lute shaped like a boat. It has wooden tightening rods and frets made of beeswax. One string is often
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Chapter 3: The Sounds of English. Consonants and Vowels. An Articu-latory Classification and Description. Acoustic Correlates 3.1. Consonants and Vowels. Traditional distinctions. Chomsky and Halle’s SPE definition 3.2. Criteria for consonant classification. Vocal cord vibration. Sonority 3.3. Manner of articulation. Plosives. Fricatives. Affricates 3.4. Sonorants. The Approximants: glides and liquids 3.5. Oral and nasal articulation 3.6. Force of articulation 3.7. Place of articulation 3.8. The
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break; case ’b’ : System.out.println("\nNumber of Consonats: " + Cons); break; case ’c’ : System.out.println("\nNumber of vowels: " + Vowels); System.out.println("\nNumber of Consonants: " + Cons); break; case ’d’: System.out.print("Enter a String: "); input = keyboard.nextLine(); break; } } while (Character.toLowerCase(selection)!=’e’);
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the air cannot flow freely and thus could not make some sounds. In contrast to human’s anatomy‚ stumans can only articulate some consonants like clicks and nasal consonant and nasal vowels. On account of different anatomy features of human and stumans‚ while human can make all of the consonants‚ stumans can only articulate a part of the consonants. For human‚ consonants are produced with some restriction and closure in the vocal tract that blocks the air coming from lungs. (p. 235/9th ed.) Human
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Manner of Articulation Stop - Complete closure of the oral cavity. [p]‚ [t]‚ and [k] are examples of oral stops because the nasal cavity is closed as well (i.e. there is no airflow through the nose). [m] and [n] are examples of nasal stops because the nasal cavity remains open allowing airflow through the nose. On a spectrogram oral stops are chracterized by a gap in the formants during the closure‚ followed by a sharp resumption at the release. Stops can be aspirated in which case the release
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Bartłomiej Czaplicki Fonetyka i fonologia American English Allophones CONSONANTS: 1. Aspiration Rule: Voiceless stops are aspirated in the following context: stressed syllable initially before a vowel. The rule applies inside words. @pHArt @tHŒrn s´@pHoUz s´@kH√m 2. Nasal Plosion Rule: Stops have a nasal plosion before nasals. The rule applies inside words and across word boundaries. @hQp≤n2 @beIk≤n2 @hId≤n2 @tHAp≤moUst @SArp≤ @naIf 3. Lack of Plosion. Rule: Oral stops have no plosion before
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