| phoneme |
A minimally distinct sound in the context of a particular spoken language. For example, in American English, /p/ and /b/ are distinct phonemes because pat and bat are distinct; however, the two different sounds of /t/ in tick and stick are not distinct in English, even though they are distinct in other languages such as Thai.
Ãâó: pipin.tmd.ns.ac.yu/unicode/www.unicode.org/glossar...
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| phoneme |
The smallest unit of speech sound that makes a difference in communication (eg fly consists of three phonemes: /f/-/l/-/`i/).
Ãâó: www.armour.k12.sd.us/Mary's%20Classes/literary...
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| phoneme |
A unique individual sound used in a language.
Ãâó: www.stevenblack.com/intl%20glossary.html
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| phoneme |
[noun] A phoneme is the smallest unit of sound (analogous to a morpheme) which can be identified from an acoustic flow of speech and which is semantically distinct..
Ãâó: portal.bibliotekivest.no/terminology.htm
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| phoneme |
In linguistics, a set of closely related speech sounds (phones) regarded as a single sound. For example, the sound of "r" in red, bring, or round is a phoneme.
Ãâó: naming.com/resources.html
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