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phoneme The individual distinguishable sound items in a language whose concatenation, in a particular order, produces morphemes. Phonemes are discrete, not continuously variable. Phonological or Phonemic identity is the sameness of the sound from the linguistic point of view.
Ãâó: www.hbcse.tifr.res.in/Data/Objects/j/jram/jrmcont/...
phoneme A phoneme is the smallest unit of the sound system of a language. If two sounds have the same phoneme, they are treated equally. A phoneme is represented between slashes.
Ãâó: www.sf.airnet.ne.jp/~ts/japanese/term.html
phoneme A phoneme is the smallest contrastive unit of sound in a word. There are approximately 44 phonemes in English (the number varies depending on the accent). A phoneme may have variant pronunciations in different positions; for example, the first and last sounds in the word little are variants of the phoneme /l/. A phoneme may be represented by one, two, three or four letters. The following words end in the same phoneme (with the corresponding letters underlined):
Ãâó: www.standards.dfes.gov.uk/keystage3/respub/mflfram...
phoneme A phoneme is the smallest part of spoken language that makes a difference in the meaning of words. English has about 41 phonemes. A few words, such as a or oh, have only one phoneme. Most words, however, have more than one phoneme: The word if has two phonemes (/i/ /f/); check has three phonemes (/ch/ /e/ /k/), and stop has four phonemes (/s/ /t/ /o/ /p/). Sometimes one phoneme is represented by more than one letter.
Ãâó: www.illinoisearlylearning.org/chat/marks-glossary....
phoneme Basic unit of sound in a language that allows distinction between words.
Ãâó: www.em-t.com/d-glossary.htm
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