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A nice character in search of an identity? [not sure if this entry is appropriate or belongs under this heading]
The letter c represents a number of different phonetic values (alone or in combination with another character, e.g., h). The title of this entry illustrates a few of these in English. It seems redundant with k or s in many languages - at least from a phonological (?) point of view. Some languages use it alone (or doubled) to represent the affricate ch sound as in English chair. Chinese pinyin uses it to represent a ts sound. |
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Articulation
+ German [tse:] + English [si:] + French [se] + Source // Mangold, Max. Duden. Das Aussprachewörterbuch. 6. Auflage. Bibliographisches Institut F. A. Brockhaus AG: Mannheim, 2005. |
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International Phonetic Alphabet
+ Consonant + Sound example + Alternatives // unknown + Former versions // unknown + Origin // Latin alphabet, small letter + In the IPA since 1900 + IPA number 107 + This sound can be found in Albanian, Czech, Greek, Hungarian, Icelandic, Irish, Macedonian, Norwegian, Romanian, Slovak, Turkish and Vietnamese. Synonyms English + Official name in the IPA // ›voiceless palatal fricative‹ + Source // Principles of the International Phonetic Association, London, 1949. / Journal of the International Phonetic Association, 1989. / Wikipedia. Die Liste der IPA-Zeichen & History of the International Phonetic Alphabet. / Handbook of the International Phonetic Association: A Guide to the Use of the International Phonetic Alphabet. / Pullum, Geoffrey and William A. Ladusaw. Phonetic Symbol Guide. Second edition. |
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