What's the difference between diphthongal and monophthongal?

Diphthongal


Definition:

  • (a.) Relating or belonging to a diphthong; having the nature of a diphthong.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The clustering in the present song, however, may also be due to a tendency for a mid vowel to be realized as a higher-beginning diphthong, which is characteristic of the North-Estonian coastal dialect area where the singers come from.
  • (2) Those confusions occurring in visual diphthong recognition tended to shift toward the stressed vowel element of the diphthong or to a vowel produced in a manner similar to the stressed element.
  • (3) This paper describes a successful experiment of creating several different diphthongs by judicious choice of the phase angles of a flat-spectrum waveform.
  • (4) Pronunciation of the diphthong La... La... La... causes upward and forward projection of the prosthesis.
  • (5) The effects of reverberation on the perception of vowels and diphthongs were evaluated using 10 subjects with moderate sensorineural hearing losses.
  • (6) The effects of noise and reverberation on the identification of monophthongs and diphthongs were evaluated for ten subjects with moderate sensorineural hearing losses.
  • (7) Electromyography records contraction of the mylo-hyoid during pronunciation of these diphthongs.
  • (8) In addition, a feature related to overall area of maximum lip opening and two features unique to diphthong perception were tentatively identified.
  • (9) This study investigated vowel and diphthong lipreading performance from 0 degree and 90 degree angles of observation.
  • (10) It appears that modifications in relative timing may be due to adjustments in the jaw cycle as a result of the compound nature of jaw movement for diphthongs as compared to vowels, with further modifications due to the effect of stress on these compound movements.
  • (11) Four vowels, [i], [a], [e], [u], and one diphthong [ou], produced by two male and two female tracheoesophageal speakers were analyzed by the LPC autocorrelation method.
  • (12) Six- to seven-month-old infants were tested on their ability to discriminate among three speech sounds which differed on the basis of formant-transition duration, a major cue to distinctions among stop, semivowel and diphthong classes.
  • (13) Additionally, issues related to talker normalization, coarticulation effects, segmentation, pitch, transposition, and diphthongization are discussed.
  • (14) For the diphthongs in both noise and reverberation, there was a tendency to judge a diphthong as the beginning monophthong.
  • (15) These models deal primarily with the problem of "target undershoot" associated with the coarticulation of vowels with consonants in natural speech and with the issue of "vowel-inherent spectral change" or diphthongization of English vowels.
  • (16) Although vowel confusions occurred in both test conditions, the number of vowels and diphthongs affected and the total number of errors made were significantly greater under the reverberant condition.
  • (17) Finally, the role of vowel-inherent dynamic properties, including duration and diphthongization, is briefly reviewed.
  • (18) The diphthong stimuli were significantly easier to identify than the vowel stimuli at both angles of observation.

Monophthongal


Definition:

  • (a.) Consisting of, or pertaining to, a monophthong.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Errors for monophthongs in reverberation but not in noise seemed to be related to an overestimation of vowel duration, and there was a tendency to weight the formant frequencies differently in the reverberation and quiet conditions.
  • (2) The effects of noise and reverberation on the identification of monophthongs and diphthongs were evaluated for ten subjects with moderate sensorineural hearing losses.
  • (3) Errors for monophthongs in noise seemed to be related to spectral proximity of formant frequencies for confused pairs.
  • (4) It is illustrated that the monophthongal vowel sounds of American English can be represented as clustered in perceptual target zones within a three-dimensional auditory-perceptual space (APS), and it is shown that preliminary versions of these target zones segregate a corpus of vowels of American English with 93% accuracy.
  • (5) In this experiment, the effects of changes in stress and in rate of speech (tempo) on the acoustic characteristics of American English monophthongal, nonretroflex vowels were examined.
  • (6) For the diphthongs in both noise and reverberation, there was a tendency to judge a diphthong as the beginning monophthong.

Words possibly related to "diphthongal"

Words possibly related to "monophthongal"