释义 |
thefactof notpronouncingaparticularsoundin a word (词的部分)发音省略SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrasesLinguistics: phonology & phonetics - alliterative
- alveolar
- apheresis
- aphesis
- aphetic
- aspirate
- guttural
- homonym
- lax
- lenis
- macron
- misemphasis
- mispronunciation
- phonology
- schwa
- semivowel
- sibilance
- sibilant
- speech pathology
- suprasegmental
See more results » (Definition ofelisionfrom theCambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary & Thesaurus© Cambridge University Press)- I found the half-forgotten Southern intonations and elisions as pleasing to my ear as they had formerly been.
- On the whole, he left you dubious until the moment when, from pure nervousness, his speech went wild, even suffering that slight elision of the aspirate observed by some of them.
- She scarcely sounded the t in Kentucky, since she also was of the South, where the languid air tends to produce elisions.
- The "extract" in question consists of two short paragraphs only, printed, without any indication of important elisions, in each of the paragraphs.
- This important shade of meaning may be given, I think, by the possessive u which originally belonged in the phrase, but suffered elision.
Examplesofelisionelision Listening input is characterised by features such aselisionand the placement of stress and intonation.From theCambridge English Corpus Features of connected speech are dealt with very brie-y, covering assimilation,elisionand vowel reduction.From theCambridge English Corpus Regarding metalinguistics, phoneme segmentation (elision) and phoneme blending were difficult tasks.From theCambridge English Corpus In thiselisionof identity between client and lawyer lies an ethically charged joke.From theCambridge English Corpus It is full of elisions, blind spots, evasions and contradictions.From theCambridge English Corpus The experimental measures included the phonemic awareness tasks of sound blending andelision(sound deletion) and the narrative discourse tasks.From theCambridge English Corpus There is also a keen eye to elisions and the differences within successive versions.From theCambridge English Corpus This unwarrantedelisioncan lead to inaccurate accounts of wider patterns of thought.From theCambridge English Corpus Some remarks need to be made aboutelisionwithin the line.From theCambridge English Corpus Subsequent undocumented changes, including vowelelision, are assumed to have led to the multitude of forms presented above.From theCambridge English Corpus The textual record therefore indicates that vowelelisionin general occurred later, and that anticipatory assimilation therefore also occurs later, if at all.From theCambridge English Corpus At the same time, the elisions of the case are used to move to a larger set of questions.From theCambridge English Corpus Again, this may be indicating anelisionwith the previous phrase.From theCambridge English Corpus With this kind of annunciation, listeners are likely to put much of their effort into merely decoding the false emphases and elisions.From theCambridge English Corpus The effect is to produce a dangerouselisionof past and present.From theCambridge English Corpus These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. #https://dictionary.cambridge.org//dictionary/english/elision## |