Letter (alphabet)/Related Articles: Difference between revisions

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Chris Day
No edit summary
imported>Chris Day
Line 22: Line 22:
{{r|Phoneme}}
{{r|Phoneme}}
{{r|Phonetics}}
{{r|Phonetics}}
{{r|Reading}}
{{r|Reading (process)|Reading}}
{{r|Speech Recognition}}
{{r|Speech Recognition}}
{{r|Word (language)}}
{{r|Word (language)}}
{{r|Writing system}}
{{r|Writing system}}

Revision as of 19:54, 15 March 2010

This article is developing and not approved.
Main Article
Discussion
Related Articles  [?]
Bibliography  [?]
External Links  [?]
Citable Version  [?]
 
A list of Citizendium articles, and planned articles, about Letter (alphabet).
See also changes related to Letter (alphabet), or pages that link to Letter (alphabet) or to this page or whose text contains "Letter (alphabet)".

Parent topics

  • Alphabet [r]: Writing system in which symbols - single or multiple letters, such as <a> or <ch> - represent phonemes (significant 'sounds') of a language. [e]
  • English spellings [r]: Lists of English words showing pronunciation, and articles about letters. [e]

Subtopics

  • Vowel [r]: Speech sound with relatively unhindered airflow; different vowels are articulated mainly through tongue movements at the palatal and velar regions of the mouth, and are usually voiced (i.e. involve vocal fold movement). [e]

Other related topics

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Use in English
Alphabetical word list
Retroalphabetical list  
Common misspellings  

  • Apostrophe [r]: Sign marking absence of a letter and, in English, possessive case. [e]
  • Consonant [r]: Unit of language, defined in phonetics as a speech sound that involves full or partial 'closure' of the mouth, and in phonology as a segment that cannot occupy the nucleus or 'peak' of a syllable. [e]
  • Esperanto [r]: Artificial language created by L.L. Zamenhof in the late 19th century. [e]
  • French words in English [r]: French words and phrases in English, including a catalog. [e]
  • GH [r]: A digraph (a two-letter grapheme) used with various different values in a number of languages using the Latin alphabet. [e]
  • Gamma (Greek letter) [r]: The third letter of the Greek alphabet, written (upper-case) or (lower-case). [e]
  • Irish language [r]: A Goidelic Celtic language spoken mainly on the island of Ireland and in Canada. [e]
  • Japanese English [r]: English as used by native speakers of Japanese, either for communicating with non-Japanese speakers or commercial and entertainment purposes. Includes vocabulary and usages not found in the native English-speaking world. [e]
  • Orthography of Irish [r]: Add brief definition or description
  • Orthography [r]: Art or study of correct spelling and grammar according to established usage. [e]
  • Phoneme [r]: Theoretical unit of language that can distinguish words or syllables, such as /b/ versus /m/; often considered the smallest unit of language, but is a transcription convention rather than a true unit in most models of phonology since the 1960s. [e]
  • Phonetics [r]: Study of speech sounds and their perception, production, combination, and description. [e]
  • Reading [r]: Process of understanding and gaining knowledge from written text. [e]
  • Speech Recognition [r]: The ability to recognize and understand human speech, especially when done by computers. [e]
  • Word (language) [r]: A unit of language, often regarded as 'minimally distinctive' and used to build larger structures such as phrases; languages vary in how distinctive word units are and how much they may be modified. [e]
  • Writing system [r]: A set of signs used to represent a language, such as an alphabet, or a set of rules used to write a language, such as conventions of spelling and punctuation. [e]