Asked in MythologyGeometryMathematiciansVowel Sounds
Mythology
Geometry
Mathematicians
Vowel Sounds
What is the history of vowel triangle?
Answer

Wiki User
September 14, 2011 10:20AM
bla bla bla.......................... heheheh WA koy answer sawy gud.....................
Related Questions
Asked in Vowel Sounds
How do you know if it is indicating the long vowel sound in Japanese?

It depends. If you are reading from kana, there will be a
doubled vowel or a line indicating the doubling. If you are reading
from 'romanji', English lettering, there will either be a line or a
triangle over the vowel indicating it should be lenghened or it may
be doubled or another lenghening vowel may follow, as in "ou".
Asked in English Language, Teaching Resources, English Spelling and Pronunciation
What is a Vietor Triangle?

Vietor Triangle (Linguistics):
A Vietor Triangle (also known as the Vowel Triangle) is a
schematic representation of vowel sounds, created by Wilhelm
Vietor (1850-1918, German philologist and phonetician).
It shows the position of the tongue and jaw
according the vowel sound(s) required when speaking.
He published many works on language and phonetics, and on
teaching language. For example, his book "Elemente der Phonetik
des Deutschen, Englischen und Französischen" ~Printed in
Leipzig, by O.R.Reisland 1893, covers the elements of German,
English and French words and their pronunciation.
A Vietor Triangle (also known as the Vowel
Triangle) is a schematic representation of vowel
sounds, created by Wilhelm Vietor (1850-1918, German
philologist and phonetician).
It shows the position of the tongue and
jaw according the vowel sound(s) required when
speaking.
He published many works on language and phonetics, and on
teaching language. For example, his book "Elemente der Phonetik
des Deutschen, Englischen und Französischen" ~Printed in
Leipzig, by O.R.Reisland 1893, covers the elements of German,
English and French words and their pronunciation.
Asked in C++ Programming
A c plus plus program that defines vowels?

#include<locale>
#include<iostream>
#include<string>
bool is_vowel(const char c)
{
static const std::string vowels = "AEIOU";
return( vowels.find(toupper(c))<vowels.size() );
}
int main()
{
std::string alphabet =
"abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ";
for(size_t i=0; i<alphabet.size(); ++i)
{
std::cout<<'\''<<alphabet[i]<<"\' is ";
if( !is_vowel( alphabet[i] ))
std::cout<<"not ";
std::cout<<"a vowel."<<std::endl;
}
}
Output:
'a' is a vowel.
'b' is not a vowel.
'c' is not a vowel.
'd' is not a vowel.
'e' is a vowel.
'f' is not a vowel.
'g' is not a vowel.
'h' is not a vowel.
'i' is a vowel.
'j' is not a vowel.
'k' is not a vowel.
'l' is not a vowel.
'm' is not a vowel.
'n' is not a vowel.
'o' is a vowel.
'p' is not a vowel.
'q' is not a vowel.
'r' is not a vowel.
's' is not a vowel.
't' is not a vowel.
'u' is a vowel.
'v' is not a vowel.
'w' is not a vowel.
'x' is not a vowel.
'y' is not a vowel.
'z' is not a vowel.
'A' is a vowel.
'B' is not a vowel.
'C' is not a vowel.
'D' is not a vowel.
'E' is a vowel.
'F' is not a vowel.
'G' is not a vowel.
'H' is not a vowel.
'I' is a vowel.
'J' is not a vowel.
'K' is not a vowel.
'L' is not a vowel.
'M' is not a vowel.
'N' is not a vowel.
'O' is a vowel.
'P' is not a vowel.
'Q' is not a vowel.
'R' is not a vowel.
'S' is not a vowel.
'T' is not a vowel.
'U' is a vowel.
'V' is not a vowel.
'W' is not a vowel.
'X' is not a vowel.
'Y' is not a vowel.
'Z' is not a vowel.