IPA Consonants an Affricates

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Uploaded by on Apr 27, 2008

IPA Study guide. Vocals by Dr. Kathleen Cleary. video by Dan Foley

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Education

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  • @christopheclugston Oh and the conversation is over, its apparent nothing significant will come of it with the way your talking. So, comment back all you want but you will just be talking to yourself. So toodles. Enjoy brooding, idiot. C:

  • @christopheclugston Wow, you sound like a 10 year old rambling on like you are, calling people names. Pretty pathetic.Its apparent you can't handle heated arguments and you let your emotions get in the way. I mean really,"...you Monolingual..."? Is that suppose to be an insult or your poor attempt to make me angry? You're just coming across as desperate to prove your intelligence, spewing out facts and try to make me try to prove myself to you. Which, btw, would be a complete waste of my time.

  • It's obvious from your pathetic reply that you're a monolingual who knows NOTHING about linguistics. It's salient that you have no experience with anything outside of 1 language. You are too stupid to realize that ad hominen attacks against someone who clearly knows far more than you are meaningless. Please explain why [dl] is a high frequency affricate in other languages you MONOLINGUAL.Or what about [pf] [b β] of the many homorganic affricates. Stick to English, you're not cut out for more.

  • @christopheclugston Its clear just from this comment alone you know absolutely nothing about the Phonetics I use in my field of practice nor have you taken a Phonetics course using phonetics in speech path. I noticed you think your a linguist (with your sad attempt at making videos) and because of that you also think you know all there is about language.I can see you will just be ignorant to anything I say because you "think" you know it all, so this conversation is clearly going to go no where

  • @KyoCatLove You don't use them because you are not a Field Linguist. Please tell me more about the field I am in. Especially in MSEA the differences are what we in LINGUISTICS, not English Speech Pathology, call DISTINCTIVE. And the Affricates I listed are distinctive; there are not only two as you stated.

  • @KyoCatLove What languages have you work with? Only English, right? As your not seeing aspiration or voicing as dinsticve gives it away. Well in the world of Field Linguistics there are differences. Phonetic is narrow transcription (now I didn't add things like fronted, etc) Phonemic is broad transcription.

  • @christopheclugston Oh and the "other" symbols that could have been used for tʃ & dʒ is no longer standard IPA so we dont use them when doing a transcription. (IPA stands for the International Phonetic Alphabet.)

  • @christopheclugston lol, no it's not. Im a Speech Pathologist and there are only TWO affricates tʃ & dʒ (there are other symbols that can represent these TWOsounds but no matter how many there are,there is only TWO affricate sounds)What you typed is the different possible symbols for the Ch sound as well as something called,Broad and Narrow transcriptions that are ONLYused when transcribing a conversation of a patient or writing(which is only done in college when a person is learning phonetics)

  • @KyoCatLove Your phonetics knowledge is rather limited here are a few of the many [tsʰ] [ts] [tʃ] [tʃʰ]

  • @christopheclugston no there isn't

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