• Title/Summary/Keyword: syllable count

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Distinguishing features and variability of intonation patterns in Korean phonological phrases: The effects of syllable count and segmental content (한국어 음운구 억양 유형의 변별적 특성과 변이 조건에 대한 연구: 음절 수와 분절음 종류의 영향을 중심으로)

  • Oh, Jeahyuk
    • Phonetics and Speech Sciences
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    • v.14 no.3
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    • pp.27-40
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    • 2022
  • This study identifies distinguishing features and variability of intonation patterns in Korean phonological phrases. Syllable count and segmental content, which are phonological conditions, of the intonation of phonological phrases were examined. Based on the four syllables, the intonation of a phonological phrase can be set to LHLH as the basic form, and syllable count acts as a condition for making a variation. The "3 syllables or less condition" changes the intonation from a curved line to a straight line. Variation occurs in pitch bandwidth and fluctuation according to segmental content. The first segment affects the phonological phrase formation bandwidth, and the following segment affects the pitch fluctuation. If the first segment has [+aspirate], [+tense], [+continuant], the intonation is formed in the high band, otherwise, it is formed in the low band. If the second or after segment in the intonation realized in the high band has [-aspirate], [-tense], [-continuant], the pitch is lowered to the lowest level of the low bandwidth. In the intonation realized in the low band, [+aspirate], [+tense], [+continuant] is blocked by the second descent of LHLH.

Kindergartners' Reading of Words in Hangul : Effects of Phonological Awareness and Processing (음운론적 인식과 처리능력이 4-6세 유아의 한글 단어 읽기에 미치는 영향)

  • Choi, Na Ya;Yi, Soon Hyung
    • Korean Journal of Child Studies
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    • v.28 no.4
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    • pp.73-95
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    • 2007
  • Causal relationships of kindergarteners' phonological awareness and processing to their ability to read words was investigated with the participation of 289 4- to 6-year-old children attending three kindergartens in Busan. Results showed gradual growth in reading ability with age. Children performed best in reading words and poorest in reading low frequency letters. They showed continuous development in skills of syllable deletion, phoneme substitution, phoneme insertion, phonological memory and naming. Discontinuous development was found in counting syllables. Longer syllables were difficult to count, and middle syllables of 3 syllable words were hard to delete. Children had poor perception of final consonants of Consonant-Vowel-Consonant syllables. Children's phonological awareness and processing were latent variables strongly related to ability to read words written in Hangul.

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A study on the Form of Sijo seen from Various Aspects (다각적 관점에서 본 시조 형식 연구)

  • Im, Jong-Chan
    • Sijohaknonchong
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    • v.30
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    • pp.147-164
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    • 2009
  • The conclusion of this paper is as follows. First, the authentic syllable count of sijo can be summed up as following: Second, the structure of the statement can be summed up as following: 1) Each statement extremely excludes the use of modifiers to clarify the development of the logic. 2) The meaning of each of the three statement, chojang (the 1st statement), jungjang (the middle statement) and jongjang (the last statement), is connected to the previous one closely, so the text as a whole is perfect. 3) The last statement identifies itself as the conversion or conclusion of the whole text. Therefore, the last statement should begin with a connective adverb like 'Therefore' or 'Then'. But in ancient sijo works, this sort of connected adverb is normally omitted. 4) Each statement of sijo is composed of one of the 4 structures suggested below: a) subjective phrase + predicative phrase b) the formal clause + the latter clause c) location-indicating phrase + sentence d) objective phrase + predicative phrase Since the text of a sijo work is formed like this, sijo is said to be composed of three jang (statement) & six gu (phrase), which is the very feature that proves that sijo is a fixed form of verse.

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A Study on the Spectrum Variation of Korean Speech (한국어 음성의 스펙트럼 변화에 관한 연구)

  • Lee Sou-Kil;Song Jeong-Young
    • Journal of Internet Computing and Services
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    • v.6 no.6
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    • pp.179-186
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    • 2005
  • We can extract spectrum of the voices and analyze those, after employing features of frequency that voices have. In the spectrum of the voices monophthongs are thought to be stable, but when a consonant(s) meet a vowel(s) in a syllable or a word, there is a lot of changes. This becomes the biggest obstacle to phoneme speech recognition. In this study, using Mel Cepstrum and Mel Band that count Frequency Band and auditory information, we analyze the spectrums that each and every consonant and vowel has and the changes in the voices reftects auditory features and make it a system. Finally we are going to present the basis that can segment the voices by an unit of phoneme.

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A quantitative study on the minimal pair of Korean phonemes: Focused on syllable-initial consonants (한국어 음소 최소대립쌍의 계량언어학적 연구: 초성 자음을 중심으로)

  • Jung, Jieun
    • Phonetics and Speech Sciences
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    • v.11 no.1
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    • pp.29-40
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    • 2019
  • The paper investigates the minimal pair of Korean phonemes quantitatively. To achieve this goal, I calculated the number of consonant minimal pairs in the syllable-initial position as both raw counts and relative counts, and analyzed the part of speech relations of the two words in the minimal pair. "Urimalsaem" was chosen as the object of this study because it was judged that the minimal pair analysis should be done through a dictionary and it is the largest among Korean dictionaries. The results of the study are summarized as follows. First, there were 153 types of minimal pairs out of 337,135 examples. The ranking of phoneme pairs from highest to lowest was 'ㅅ-ㅈ, ㄱ-ㅅ, ㄱ-ㅈ, ㄱ-ㅂ, ㄱ-ㅎ, ${\ldots}$, ㅆ-ㅋ, ㄸ-ㅋ, ㅉ-ㅋ, ㄹ-ㅃ, ㅃ-ㅋ'. The phonemes that played a major role in the formation of the minimal pair were /ㄱ, ㅅ, ㅈ, ㅂ, ㅊ/, in that order, which showed a high proportion of palatals. The correlation between the raw count of minimal pairs and the relative count of minimal pairs was found to be quite high r=0.937. Second, 87.91% of the minimal pairs shared the part of speech (same syntactic category). The most frequently observed type has been 'noun-noun' pair (70.25%), and 'vowel-vowel' pair (14.77%) was the next ranking. It can be indicated that the minimal pair could be grouped into similar categories in terms of semantics. The results of this study can be useful for various research in Korean linguistics, speech-language pathology, language education, language acquisition, speech synthesis, and artificial intelligence-machine learning as basic data related to Korean phonemes.

Hanja Information in the Entries of Korean Unabridged Dictionary (국어대사전의 표제어에 나타나는 한자 정보)

  • Kim, Cheol-Su
    • The Journal of the Korea Contents Association
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    • v.10 no.4
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    • pp.438-446
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    • 2010
  • For language information processing that includes both Hangul and Hanja, an electronic dictionary supporting Hangul and Hanja simultaneously is necessary. This paper examined statistical information on Hanja entries of Korean Unabridged Dictionary such as the number of entries that include Hanja based on the KSC-5601 character set, the frequency of the pronunciation and meaning of each character of Hanja included in the entries, the frequency per part of speech of Hanja in entries and the average number of Hanja characters per entry. At least one or more of Hanja characters appear in 303,951 entries out of 440,594, accounting for 68.99% of the total. 858,595 characters of Hanja are included in the 440,594 entries, which is 1.95 Hanja characters per entry. As the average syllable length of the entries is 3.56 and the average count of the Hanja characters per entry is 1.96, it can be said that 54.7% of all the characters of the entries are in Hanja. Among 4,888 Hanja character codes, 4,660 are used once or more, whereas 228 Hanja codes never appear in any entry. There were 5 characters which appear more than 4,000 times. A total of 858,595 Hanja characters used in all the entries correspond to 471 Hangeul codes.