Stress is the degree of force which is accompanied by a strong force of exhalation and gives an impression of loudness
In Phonetics, to pronounce a word or syllable with prominent loudness. To stress a word in a sentence to emphasise its importance. In Mechanics, the force of something that produces deformation or a strain
There are three main branches of phonetics: i) Articulary Phonetics ii) Acoustic Phonetics iii) Auditory Phonetics
Try Googling 'phonetics exercises' or 'exercises for phonetics'
what is scope of phonetics
Phonetics is the science studying the sounds of speech: it is all about the way you say things (articulatory phonetics), hear things (acoustic phonetics) and perceive what you hear (auditory phonetics). Studies in phonetics become increasingly important today, as they are central to speech recognition technology.
The subject-matter of phonetics.
Journal of Phonetics was created in 1973.
You can find a list of phonetics at the site below.
Penultimate means next-to-last, and "penultimate stress" in phonetics refers to stress in a word falling on the penultimate syllable. In other words, a word carrying penultimate stress is a word that is stressed on the next to the last syllable, e.g. he-li-COP-ter, AF-ter, fan-TAS-tic, etc.
The word phonetics has 3 syllables in it.
The use of phonetics (the science of speech) for forensic (legal) purposes.
The word 'calm' is written in phonetics as /kÉËm/.