vocalization
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English
Etymology
Pronunciation
- (New Zealand, UK, Ireland, General Australian) IPA(key): /vəʊk(ə)lʌɪˈzeɪʃ(ə)n/
- (US) IPA(key): /voʊk(ə)l(a)ɪˈzeɪʃ(ə)n/
Noun
vocalization (countable and uncountable, plural vocalizations)
- The act of vocalizing or something vocalized; a vocal utterance
- Any specific mode of utterance; pronunciation
- The use of speech to express an idea
- (biology) The production of communication sounds with the syrinx or larynx (in tetrapods) or with the swim bladder (in fish)
- (music) The production of musical sounds using the voice, especially as an exercise
- (orthography) The vowel diacritics in certain scripts, like Hebrew and Arabic, which are not normally written, but which are used in dictionaries, children's books, religious texts and textbooks for learners.
- (orthography, phonology) The addition of these diacritics and the respective phonemes to a word; the spoken form the word thereby receives.
- (phonology) The change in pronunciation of historically or variably consonant (typically sonorant) sounds as vowels. For example, the syllabic /l/ in words like people or the coda one in words like cold or coal are variably realized as a high back vowel or glide—[ʊ], [u], [ɤ] or [o]—in many dialects of English in the US, UK, and the Southern Hemisphere. For example, in African American Vernacular English, one common pronunciation of the words "people", "cold", and "coal" is [pʰipʊ], [kʰoɤd], or [kʰoɤ] respectively.
Synonyms
- vowelization (supplying vowels/diacritics to Arabic and Hebrew words/texts)
- tashkil (Arabic)
- nikud (Hebrew)
Derived terms
Related terms
Translations
act of vocalizing or something vocalized
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specific mode of utterance
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use of speech to express an idea
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production of musical sound
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supplying the vowels (diacritics), e.g. Arabic and Hebrew
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phonology: the change in pronunciation of historically or variably consonant (typically sonorant) sounds as vowels
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