different between phonate vs phonation
phonate
English
Etymology
From Ancient Greek ???? (ph?n?, “voice, sound”) +? -ate (suffix indicating action in a specified manner), modelled after phonation. ???? is ultimately derived from Proto-Indo-European *b?eh?- (“to say, speak”).
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /f???ne?t/, /f?-/
- (General American) IPA(key): /?fo??ne?t/
- Hyphenation: phon?ate
Verb
phonate (third-person singular simple present phonates, present participle phonating, simple past and past participle phonated)
- (intransitive) To make sounds with the voice.
- (transitive) To use the voice to make (specific sounds).
Related terms
- phonated (adjective)
- phonation
Translations
Adjective
phonate (not comparable)
- voiced
Antonyms
- unphonated
References
Further reading
- phonation on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Anagrams
- Phaeton, Phaëton, Phæton, phaeton
phonate From the web:
- what does phonation mean
- what is phonation mean
- what does phonetic mean
- what does phonate me
- what is phonate in tagalog
- what does the phonate
- what is a phonation
- what is phonation process
phonation
English
Etymology
From Ancient Greek ???? (ph?n?, “voice, sound”), equivalent to phonate +? -ion.
Noun
phonation (countable and uncountable, plural phonations)
- (phonetics) The process of producing vocal sound by the vibration of the vocal folds that is in turn modified by the resonance of the vocal tract.
Derived terms
Related terms
- phonate
Translations
phonation From the web:
- what is phonation in speech
- what does phonation mean
- what is phonation in singing
- what is phonation process
- what is phonation in speech production
- what causes phonation breaks
- what are phonation breaks
- what does phonation weak mean
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