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      Edupedia

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        Contents
        Reading & Literacy
        What are Phonotactics?
        What are Phonotactics?
        Rules for what speech sound can occur in a language and how those speech sounds combine to create words is known as phonotactics. An example would be that phonotactics guide the number of syllables that are permissible in words, what are permissible as word positions for vowels and consonants, the
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        What are Intonations and Tones?
        What are Intonations and Tones?
        Tones are the pitch patterns of individual words and syllables as opposed to intonations that reflect the pitch of an utterance (rising and falling pitch). Tone serves a phonemic function when present in tonal languages such as Cantonese, those changes in tone by height, contour, and duration to alter the
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        What are Primary, Secondary and Weak Stress?
        What are Primary, Secondary and Weak Stress?
        There are three types of stress related to words. These are primary, secondary, and weak stress. Primary stress denotes the strongest syllable of a word, secondary denotes strong syllables with less emphasis than the primary, and weak syllables are typically realized by the schwa. In English can also be used
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        What are Vowels and Diphthongs?
        What are Vowels and Diphthongs?
        The IPA chart depicts vowels on the vowel quadrilateral with the shape and, in particular, the corners of the quadrilateral resembling the general relationship of the tongue position during the vowel productions [a], [i]. [o], [u]. Vowels can be described about advancement, tongue height, tenseness, rounding, length, and nasality. In
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        What are Diacritics?
        What are Diacritics?
        Small letter shaped symbols, or other types of marks that can be added to a vowel or consonant symbol to modify or refine its meaning are known as diacritics. The IPA chart contains 31 diacritic symbols. In the General American English, a common diacritic is the rhoticity diacritic /˞/ that
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        What are Non-Pulmonic Consonants?
        What are Non-Pulmonic Consonants?
        Non-pulmonic consonants are clicks, ejectives, and implosives that though not used in English are present in other languages. Children who have hearing loss have been reported as using ejectives, and those with SSD have been reported as using clicks.
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        What are Pulmonic Consonants?
        What are Pulmonic Consonants?
        Pulmonic constants constitute the majority of consonants produced by speakers when air is expelled from the lungs when articulated. On the IPA chart, pulmonic consonants are well organized concerning the absence or presence of voicing and the place of articulation and manner (how the consonant is articulated). Across the English
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        What is the International Phonetic Alphabet?
        What is the International Phonetic Alphabet?
        The International Phonetic Alphabet, otherwise known as IPA, began in 1886 and is considered the universal symbol system used for transcribing consonants (non-pulmonic and pulmonic), suprasegmental features, and vowels, diacritics that are evident in speakers across the word, and tones and accents.
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        What is Systematic Transcription?
        What is Systematic Transcription?
        Linguists and phoneticians use systematic transcription as a form of documentation for typical, common, or standard realizations of speech. This form of transcription may be phonetic (capturing allophonic variations or phenomes in a language) or phonemic (capturing the phenomes in a language) in nature. Phonemic transcription is written within slashes
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        What is Digital Literacy?
        What is Digital Literacy?
        By this definition, encompasses a wide range of skills, all of which are necessary to succeed in an increasingly digital world. As print mediums begin to die out, the ability to comprehend information found online becomes more and more important. Students who lack digital literacy skills may soon find themselves
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