different between phonetic vs vocoid
phonetic
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin ph?n?ticus, from Ancient Greek ????????? (ph?n?tikós).
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /f??n?t?k/
- (US) IPA(key): /f??n?t?k/, [f??n???k]
- Hyphenation: pho?net?ic
Adjective
phonetic (not comparable)
- Relating to the sounds of spoken language.
- (linguistics) Relating to phones (as opposed to phonemes)
Derived terms
Related terms
Translations
Noun
phonetic (plural phonetics)
- (linguistics) In such writing systems as the Chinese writing system, the portion of a phono-semantic character that provides an indication of its pronunciation; contrasted with semantic (which is usually the radical).
Translations
phonetic From the web:
- what phonetic means
- what phonetic alphabet
- what phonetic transcription
- what phonetics and phonology
- what phonetic symbols
- what phonetics study
- what phonetic segments condition this change
- what is phonetic example
vocoid
English
Etymology
voc(al) +? -oid, 1940s, coined by Kenneth Lee Pike, American linguist (1912-2000).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?vo?.k??d/
Noun
vocoid (plural vocoids)
- (linguistics) A phonetic vowel, as opposed to a phonological one.
- Coordinate term: contoid
Translations
References
vocoid From the web:
- what are vocoids and contoids
- what does vocoid mean in linguistics
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- phonetic vs vocoid
- vocoid vs contoid
- vocoid vs umlaut
- nosles vs nosels
- nosels vs novels
- nosers vs nosels
- noels vs nosels
- howes vs hoes
- howes vs homes
- hower vs howes
- howves vs howes
- colters vs bolters
- jolters vs bolters
- boates vs boated
- boates vs boats
- boates vs blates
- boates vs bovates
- boater vs boates
- boatel vs boates
- pops vs nops