International Phonetic Alphabet/Related Articles
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- Alphabet [r]: Writing system in which symbols - single or multiple letters, such as <a> or <ch> - represent phonemes (significant 'sounds') of a language. [e]
- Baccalauréat [r]: An academic degree which French students sit for at the end of the lycée (secondary school). [e]
- Bangla language [r]: An Indo-Aryan language of the eastern Indian subcontinent, evolved from the Magadhi Prakrit, Pāli and Sanskrit languages. [e]
- British and American English [r]: A comparison between these two language variants in terms of vocabulary, spelling and pronunciation. [e]
- C (letter) [r]: The third letter of the English and Latin alphabets. [e]
- Cherokee language [r]: An Iroquoian language spoken by the Cherokee people which uses a unique syllabary writing system. [e]
- Cyrillic alphabet [r]: The alphabet used for a number of languages, mostly Slavonic ones, including Russian, Bulgarian and Serbian. [e]
- England [r]: The largest and southernmost country in the United Kingdom, and location of the largest city and seat of government, London; population about 51,000,000. [e]
- English irregular nouns [r]: English language nouns whose plural forms do not follow the standard rule of adding an –s to the end. [e]
- English irregular verbs [r]: English language verbs whose past and past participle tense forms do not follow the standard rules of add –d or -ed to the end but instead have special forms. [e]
- English phonemes [r]: A list of abstract sound units and their various spellings. [e]
- English spellings [r]: Lists of English words showing pronunciation, and articles about letters. [e]
- Esperanto [r]: Artificial language created by L.L. Zamenhof in the late 19th century. [e]
- French language [r]: A Romance language spoken in northwestern Europe (mainly in France, Belgium, Switzerland), in Canada and in many other countries. [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]
- German language [r]: A West-Germanic language, the official language of Germany, Austria and Liechtenstein, one of several official languages in Switzerland and Belgium, and also spoken in Italy and Denmark. [e]
- Greek alphabet [r]: Set of twenty-four letters that has been used to write the Greek language since the late 9th or early 8th century BC. [e]
- Hawaiian language [r]: One of the two official languages in the State of Hawaii [e]
- Japanese language [r]: (日本語 Nihongo), Japonic language spoken mostly in Japan; Japonic family's linguistic relationship to other tongues yet to be established, though Japanese may be related to Korean; written in a combination of Chinese-derived characters (漢字 kanji) and native hiragana (ひらがな) and katakana (カタカナ) scripts; about 125,000,000 native speakers worldwide. [e]
- Jarai language [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Johann Sebastian Bach [r]: German composer (1685-1750). [e]
- Jorge Luis Borges [r]: An Argentinean author best known for his Magical Realism short stories. [e]
- Korean language [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Linguistics [r]: The scientific study of language. [e]
- Livonian language [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Mumbai [r]: The capital of the Indian state of Maharashtra, and is the most populous city in India; formerly known as Bombay. [e]
- Nepali language [r]: Add brief definition or description
- O (letter) [r]: The fifteenth letter of the basic modern Latin alphabet. [e]
- Palatalization [r]: An umbrella term for several processes of assimilation in phonetics and phonology, by which the articulation of a consonant is changed under the influence of a preceding or following front vowel or a palatal or palatalized consonant. [e]
- Phonetics [r]: Study of speech sounds and their perception, production, combination, and description. [e]
- Phonology [r]: In linguistics, the study of the system used to represent language, including sounds in spoken language and hand movements in sign language. [e]
- Portuguese language [r]: An Iberian Romance language, of the Indo-European family. [e]
- Potomac River [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Punjabi language [r]: The language of the Punjabi people and the Punjab regions of India and Pakistan. [e]
- Q (letter) [r]: The seventeenth letter of the English alphabet. [e]
- Russian language [r]: Widely-used member of the Slavic languages, written in the Cyrillic alphabet and spoken across Eurasia. [e]
- Sanskrit [r]: Historical Indo-Aryan language, one of the liturgical languages of Hinduism, Buddhism, and the Vedas and is the classical literary language of India. [e]
- Schwa [r]: Mid-central neutral vowel, typically occurring in unstressed syllables and, in some systems of phonetic transcription, a stressed mid-central vowel. [e]
- Spanish language [r]: A Romance language widely spoken in Spain, its current and former territories, and the United States of America. [e]
- Spelling pronunciation [r]: Pronunciation of a word that differs from the historically established one, arising on the basis of the word's spelling. [e]
- Strasbourg [r]: Capital of Alsace in France. [e]