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)

  1. Relating to the sounds of spoken language.
  2. (linguistics) Relating to phones (as opposed to phonemes)

Derived terms

Related terms

Translations

Noun

phonetic (plural phonetics)

  1. (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)

  1. (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
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