Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
The open vowels only contrast in a few environments.
The vowel harmony affects open vowels in the roots, which become close.
Most languages have some form of an unrounded open vowel.
His answer, with its unintentionally long chain of open vowel sounds, rang ridiculously.
Her voice is not enormous, and she seemed inclined to sing streams of open vowels instead of words.
"There are a few clicks in it, but it has the same open vowels that Italian has."
'Certain sounds, you see, can be identified without any difficulty, such as accented or open vowels.
The score is sung in Greek, with its rough melody of open vowels and muted consonants.
He is altogether an intelligent and alert artist, with a sure sense of the music of words, especially of open vowels.
The first and last letter, a (corresponding to alaph), is used to represent a range of open vowels.
Open vowels are sometimes also called low vowels in reference to the low position of the tongue.
Vowel length is generally not important: close vowels tend to be longer than open vowels.
Rounding harmony only effects the open vowels, e, o, a, ɔ.
The open vowels identified in the International Phonetic Alphabet are:
Open vowels are pronounced approximately as follows:
With some root patterns, however, it becomes an open vowel, in which case a Shuruk is written:
The three sounds preceding it are the open vowel "e", the liquid consonant "n" and the long accented "a".
'Sorry I'm late,' she said, her open vowels oozing down the aisle towards the stage.
These terms are built up from speech sounds that are easiest to produce (bilabials like m, p, and b and the open vowel a).
An open vowel is a vowel sound in which the tongue is positioned as far as possible from the roof of the mouth.
But whenever he started to sing, he employed some notion of operatic sound with round resonant tone and open vowels, rendering his words mushy.
The main difference among the dialects of Brazilian Portuguese is the frequent presence or not of open vowels in unstressed syllables.
Near-open vowels are sometimes described as lax variants of the fully open vowels.
Open vowels are marked by a line under the letter (e ), while a dot below the letter makes it a close vowel (ẹ).
"The owlet umlaut peeps and hoots/ Above the open vowel", Merrill writes, in some of the poem's most quoted lines.