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phonetic    音標拼音: [fən'ɛtɪk]
a. 語言的,語言上的,表示語音的

語言的,語言上的,表示語音的

phonetic
語音

phonetic
adj 1: of or relating to speech sounds; "phonetic transcription"
[synonym: {phonetic}, {phonic}]
2: of or relating to the scientific study of speech sounds;
"phonetic analysis"

Phonetic \Pho*net"ic\ (f[-o]*n[e^]t"[i^]k), a. [Gr. fwnhtiko`s,
fr. fwnh` a sound, tone; akin to Gr. fa`nai to speak: cf. F.
phon['e]tique. See {Ban} a proclamation.]
1. Of or pertaining to the voice, or its use.
[1913 Webster]

2. Representing sounds; as, phonetic characters; -- opposed
to {ideographic}; as, a phonetic notation.
[1913 Webster]

{Phonetic spelling}, spelling in phonetic characters, each
representing one sound only; -- contrasted with {Romanic
spelling}, or that by the use of the Roman alphabet.
[1913 Webster]

130 Moby Thesaurus words for "phonetic":
accented, alveolar, apical, apico-alveolar, apico-dental,
arrowhead, articulated, assimilated, back, barytone, bilabial,
broad, cacuminal, central, cerebral, character, checked, close,
consonant, consonantal, continuant, cuneiform, demotic character,
dental, descriptive, determinative, dissimilated, dorsal, flat,
front, glide, glossal, glottal, glottochronological, grammalogue,
grammatic, graphemic, guttural, hard, heavy, hieratic symbol,
hieroglyph, hieroglyphic, hieroglyphics, high, hiragana, ideogram,
ideograph, intonated, kana, katakana, labial, labiodental,
labiovelar, lateral, lax, lexicographic, lexicological,
lexicostatistical, light, lingual, linguistic, liquid, logogram,
logograph, low, metalinguistic, mid, monophthongal, morphological,
morphophonemic, muted, narrow, nasal, nasalized, occlusive, ogham,
open, oxytone, palatal, palatalized, pharyngeal, pharyngealized,
philological, phonemic, phonetic symbol, phonic, phonological,
pictogram, pictograph, pitch, pitched, posttonic, psycholinguistic,
radical, retroflex, rounded, rune, semantic, semivowel, shorthand,
soft, sonant, stopped, stressed, strong, structural, surd,
syllabic, syntactic, tense, thick, throaty, tonal, tonic, twangy,
unaccented, unrounded, unstressed, velar, vocalic, vocoid, voiced,
voiceless, vowel, vowellike, weak, wedge, wide, word letter

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英文字典中文字典相關資料:
  • What is the difference between phonetic and phonemic?
    Phonemics, or Phonology, is the study of the distribution of sound systems in human languages A Phoneme is a particular set of sounds produced in a particular language and distinguishable by native speakers of that language from other (sets of) sounds in that language That's what "distinctive" means -- the English phonemes n and ŋ can be told apart by native speakers of English, because
  • phonetics - The ɪ sound vs the i sound - exact difference . . .
    The i sound is just the short version of i: ; without the ː length mark it is shorter Just as you can find i: in words like peat, the i sound is found in words like happiness where the vowel is shorter In epicentre, you can find an ɪ because, in many accents, such as the Cambridge Dictionary's main focus of BrE, it is not any sort of ee sound, but an ih sound, as found in hit
  • In IPA transcription, what is the difference between “ɪ”, i, “i:”?
    As the Handbook of the International Phonetic Association (1999: 30) puts it: [T]he contrast between the words bead and bid has phonetic correlates in both vowel quality and vowel duration A phonemic representation which explicitly notes this might use the symbols iː and ɪ
  • Is the short-e pronounced as [e] or [ɛ] in standard English?
    In many English dictionaries, I saw the phonetic symbol of short-e is e such as in bed ( bed ) However, I'm taught that the pronunciation of that is ɛ Which one is right in standard English?
  • pronunciation - Could you clarify e and ɛ ? - English Language . . .
    If your own pronunciations happen to be similar to mine, this example may help to clarify the phonetic difference you're asking about To discuss a matter concerning pronunciation, which concerns the phones of a pronunciation, and use slashes, which ordinarily are used to refer to phonemic forms, is asking for confusion
  • “ē” and “iː”: I want a tutorial - English Language Usage . . .
    My English textbook use “iː”, and I find some online dictionaries use “ē” Where can I find information about this phonics system?
  • pronunciation - Is there any online tool to read (pronounce) IPA and . . .
    I am looking for a tool to read a word written as phonetic transcription (IPA or APA) I need it to provide users with a tool to verify if they've chosen the correct IPA transcription (users will n
  • phonetics - Whats the meaning of e , i: , a: , z and p . . .
    The answer marked correct is incorrect The English meaning of long and short vowels is: * a short = cat æ * a long = name eɪ These are two totally different sounds phonetically and not indicated by a colon The : in IPA is a lengthening of the preceding vowel It represents the same sound but lengthened So the example above should be: * E g i: vs i , fiit vs fit (The colon is just
  • Are phonics and Phoenician related? - English Language Usage . . .
    The word phonetic is of Greek origin (φωνή {phōni} = voice) Greek writing probably first emerged in the 8th century BCE What its predecessors appear to have lacked, namely the Phoenician alphabet, was a comprehensive representation of vowel as well as consonant sounds





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