Sulcalization (original) (raw)

About DBpedia

Sulkalizazioa (latinezko sulcus-etik "zirrikitu") edo ahurtzea, fonetikan, soinu baten ahoskera da, normalean kontsonante txistukari batena, esaterako, ingelesezko /s/ eta /z/-rena, aire-emaria mihiaren atzeko aldean hasten den zirrikitu sakon batetan zehar hortzen aurka bideratuz lortzen dena, hots bizi bat sortuz. Honakoa mihiaren atzealdean bi aldeak altxatuz lortzen da ("uzkurdura albokaria"), eta mihiaren erdialdea ahur utziz. Ez dago argi txistukari guztiak ahurrak diren: Catford-ek (1982) ikusi zuen sulkalizazio maila artikulazio lekuaren eta hizkuntzaren araberakoa dela, baina ez da ezagutzen hizkuntzarik zeinak txistukari ahur eta ez-ahurren arteko oposaketarik duen.

Property Value
dbo:abstract Sulkalizazioa (latinezko sulcus-etik "zirrikitu") edo ahurtzea, fonetikan, soinu baten ahoskera da, normalean kontsonante txistukari batena, esaterako, ingelesezko /s/ eta /z/-rena, aire-emaria mihiaren atzeko aldean hasten den zirrikitu sakon batetan zehar hortzen aurka bideratuz lortzen dena, hots bizi bat sortuz. Honakoa mihiaren atzealdean bi aldeak altxatuz lortzen da ("uzkurdura albokaria"), eta mihiaren erdialdea ahur utziz. Ez dago argi txistukari guztiak ahurrak diren: Catford-ek (1982) ikusi zuen sulkalizazio maila artikulazio lekuaren eta hizkuntzaren araberakoa dela, baina ez da ezagutzen hizkuntzarik zeinak txistukari ahur eta ez-ahurren arteko oposaketarik duen. Ingeleseko [ɹ]-k, hainbat mihi posizio ahalbidetzen dituena itxurazko bereizketa fonologikorik gabe, ahurtasunetik ere jaso dezake bere bereizgarritasuna. Fonologian eta hizkuntzalaritza historikoan, sulkalizazioa ezaugarri hori ez duen kontsonante batean mihiaren ahurtasuna garatzea da. Adibidez, bokal itxiek japonieraz ahurtasuna eragiten dute, *tu eta *ti [tsu] eta [tɕi] bihurtu direla, hurrenez hurren. hizkuntzetan antzeko hots aldaketa bat aurki daiteke (japonierazko *tsi-ren palatalizazioa prozesu ezberdina da eta ez da senufoz gertatzen). Bokalak ere sulkalizatu daitezke, "eztarriko" soinua jasoko balute bezala deskribatu izan dena (Jones 1967: 82). (eu) Sulcalization (from Latin: sulcus 'groove'), in phonetics, is the pronunciation of a sound, typically a sibilant consonant, such as English /s/ and /z/, with a deep groove running along the back of the tongue that focuses the airstream on the teeth, producing a more intense sound. This is accomplished by raising the sides of the back of the tongue ("lateral contraction") and leaving a hollow along the mid-line. It is not clear if all sibilants are grooved to at least some extent. Catford (1977) observed that the degree of tongue grooving differs between places of articulation as well as between languages; however, no language is known to contrast sibilants based purely on the presence or absence of tongue grooving. English /ɹ/, which allows various tongue positions without apparent distinction, may also receive its characteristic quality from having a grooved tongue shape. /θ/ has also been reported to show tongue grooving in English, despite being a non-sibilant fricative (Stone & Lundberg 1996). Albanian /ɫ/, but not /l/, has also been described as being produced with accompanying sulcalization (Lowman 1932: 278). In phonology and historical linguistics, sulcalization is the development of such a groove in a non-sulcal consonant. For example, close vowels triggered this effect in Japanese, where historic *tu and *ti have become [tsu] and [tɕi], respectively. A similar sound change also took place in the history of the Senufo languages. (The palatalization of *tsi to [tɕi] in Japanese is a different process and does not occur in Senufo.) Vowels may also be sulcalized, which has been described as giving them a "throaty" sound (Jones 1967: 82). The /ɒ/ vowel of Received Pronunciation, which is normally described as a rounded, is pronounced by some speakers without rounded lips for whom the characteristic quality is rather one of sulcality (Lass 1984: 124). One scholar has also suggested that the vowel in the RP pronunciation of words like bird, typically transcribed [ɜ], is actually a sulcal schwa, retaining the sulcality of the original rhotic consonant. Accordingly, the realization of the /ə/-element of the centring diphthongs /ɪə̯/, /ʊə̯/, /ɛə̯/ in words such as near, pure and scare, is interpreted as the product of a loss of sulcality (Erickson 2003: 197). (en)
dbo:wikiPageID 31858819 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength 3564 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID 1105342640 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink dbr:English_language dbr:Close_vowel dbr:Phonology dbr:Albanian_language dbc:Fricative_consonants dbr:Palatalization_(sound_change) dbr:Historical_linguistics dbr:Japanese_language dbc:Phonetics dbr:Tillamook_language dbr:Tongue_rolling dbr:Phonetics dbr:Received_Pronunciation dbr:Senufo_languages dbr:Rounded_vowel dbr:Sibilant_consonant
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate dbt:Authority_control dbt:IPA dbt:Short_description dbt:IPAslink dbt:IPAblink dbt:Articulation_navbox
dcterms:subject dbc:Fricative_consonants dbc:Phonetics
gold:hypernym dbr:Pronunciation
rdf:type owl:Thing yago:Abstraction100002137 yago:Consonant107115021 yago:ContinuantConsonant107118367 yago:FricativeConsonant107118554 yago:LanguageUnit106284225 yago:Obstruent107115684 yago:Part113809207 yago:Phone107111047 yago:Relation100031921 yago:WikicatFricativeConsonants dbo:MusicGenre
rdfs:comment Sulkalizazioa (latinezko sulcus-etik "zirrikitu") edo ahurtzea, fonetikan, soinu baten ahoskera da, normalean kontsonante txistukari batena, esaterako, ingelesezko /s/ eta /z/-rena, aire-emaria mihiaren atzeko aldean hasten den zirrikitu sakon batetan zehar hortzen aurka bideratuz lortzen dena, hots bizi bat sortuz. Honakoa mihiaren atzealdean bi aldeak altxatuz lortzen da ("uzkurdura albokaria"), eta mihiaren erdialdea ahur utziz. Ez dago argi txistukari guztiak ahurrak diren: Catford-ek (1982) ikusi zuen sulkalizazio maila artikulazio lekuaren eta hizkuntzaren araberakoa dela, baina ez da ezagutzen hizkuntzarik zeinak txistukari ahur eta ez-ahurren arteko oposaketarik duen. (eu) Sulcalization (from Latin: sulcus 'groove'), in phonetics, is the pronunciation of a sound, typically a sibilant consonant, such as English /s/ and /z/, with a deep groove running along the back of the tongue that focuses the airstream on the teeth, producing a more intense sound. This is accomplished by raising the sides of the back of the tongue ("lateral contraction") and leaving a hollow along the mid-line. It is not clear if all sibilants are grooved to at least some extent. Catford (1977) observed that the degree of tongue grooving differs between places of articulation as well as between languages; however, no language is known to contrast sibilants based purely on the presence or absence of tongue grooving. (en)
rdfs:label Sulkalizazio (eu) Sulcalization (en)
owl:sameAs freebase:Sulcalization yago-res:Sulcalization wikidata:Sulcalization dbpedia-eu:Sulcalization https://global.dbpedia.org/id/4vfpg
prov:wasDerivedFrom wikipedia-en:Sulcalization?oldid=1105342640&ns=0
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf wikipedia-en:Sulcalization
is dbo:wikiPageRedirects of dbr:Sulcalisation dbr:Grooved_consonant dbr:Grooved_fricative dbr:Sulcal dbr:Sulcal_consonant dbr:Sulcalised dbr:Sulcalising dbr:Sulcality dbr:Sulcalized dbr:Sulcalizing
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of dbr:Americanist_phonetic_notation dbr:Roundedness dbr:Sibilant dbr:Coronal_consonant dbr:Sulcalisation dbr:Sulcus dbr:Tillamook_language dbr:Tongue_shape dbr:Mid_central_vowel dbr:Open_back_rounded_vowel dbr:Retroflex_consonant dbr:Grooved_consonant dbr:Grooved_fricative dbr:Sulcal dbr:Sulcal_consonant dbr:Sulcalised dbr:Sulcalising dbr:Sulcality dbr:Sulcalized dbr:Sulcalizing
is foaf:primaryTopic of wikipedia-en:Sulcalization