Liân-to̍k gú-im
Guā-māu
Gú-im piàn-hoà hām gú-im kau-thè |
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Fortition |
Dissimilation |
Liân-to̍k gú-im (ing-gú: connected speech, hi̍k-tsiá connected discourse), teh gú-giân-ha̍k tang-tiong, liân-tsiap ê gú-im hi̍k-tsiá liân-tsiap uē-gú sī hîng-sîng kháu-gú uē-gú hi̍k tuì-uē ê liân-suà siann-im sūn-sū. Tuì liân-tsiap gú-im ê hun-sik piáu-bîng, siann-im piàn-huà ē íng-hióng thuân-thóng siōng biâu-su̍t tsò té-gú, tān-sû, sû-uī , gú-sòo , im-tsiat, im-sòo hi̍k-tsiá gú-im .[1] Uì tsia--ê kui-tsik siu-kái ê tan-sû teh liân-tsiap gú-im tang-tiong ê huat-im kah teh ín-iōng hîng-sik (kui-huān hîng-sik hi̍k-tsiá koo-li̍p hîng-sik ) lāi-té ê huat-im bô-kâng.
Tsù-kái
[siu-kái | kái goân-sí-bé]- ↑ David Crystal, A dictionary of linguistics & phonetics, Wiley-Blackwell, 2003. (Eng-gí)
Tsham-ua̍t
[siu-kái | kái goân-sí-bé]- Phonology
- Prosody (linguistics)