Intervocalic consonant

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Intervocalic_consonant

In phonetics and phonology, an intervocalic consonant is a consonant that occurs between two vowels. Intervocalic consonants are often associated with lenition, a phonetic process that causes consonants to weaken and eventually disappear entirely. An example of such a change in English is intervocalic alveolar flapping, a process (especially in North American English and Australian English) that, impressionistically speaking, turns t into d, causing (e.g.) metal and batter to sound like medal and badder, respectively. (More precisely, both /t/ and /d/ are pronounced with the alveolar tap [ɾ].) In North American English the weakening is variable across word boundaries, so that the /t/ of "see you tomorrow" may be pronounced with either tap [ɾ] or [tʰ]. Some languages have intervocalic weake rdf:langString
Se llama consonante medial a la consonante que se encuentra en el interior de la palabra en oposición a las que ocupan el principio y el fin, en cuyo caso se llaman iniciales y finales respectivamente. Con todo la acepción de medial se usa más concretamente para significar las consonantes que se hallan entre dos vocales, por ejemplo, d en vida, la m en ama, la r en quiere o la c en doce. Así pues, la consonante medial viene a ser sinónima de intervocálica. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Consonante medial
rdf:langString Intervocalic consonant
xsd:integer 31671122
xsd:integer 1060166481
rdf:langString In phonetics and phonology, an intervocalic consonant is a consonant that occurs between two vowels. Intervocalic consonants are often associated with lenition, a phonetic process that causes consonants to weaken and eventually disappear entirely. An example of such a change in English is intervocalic alveolar flapping, a process (especially in North American English and Australian English) that, impressionistically speaking, turns t into d, causing (e.g.) metal and batter to sound like medal and badder, respectively. (More precisely, both /t/ and /d/ are pronounced with the alveolar tap [ɾ].) In North American English the weakening is variable across word boundaries, so that the /t/ of "see you tomorrow" may be pronounced with either tap [ɾ] or [tʰ]. Some languages have intervocalic weakening processes fully active word-internally and in connected discourse: e.g. Spanish /d/ regularly pronounced [ð] in both todo [ˈtoðo] "all" and la duna [laˈðuna] "the dune" (but [ˈduna] if the word is pronounced alone). * v * t * e
rdf:langString Se llama consonante medial a la consonante que se encuentra en el interior de la palabra en oposición a las que ocupan el principio y el fin, en cuyo caso se llaman iniciales y finales respectivamente. Con todo la acepción de medial se usa más concretamente para significar las consonantes que se hallan entre dos vocales, por ejemplo, d en vida, la m en ama, la r en quiere o la c en doce. Así pues, la consonante medial viene a ser sinónima de intervocálica. Las consonantes intervocálicas son, por lo común, las que acusan una evolución más marcada a lo largo de la historia. Por ejemplo, la t intervocálica del latín, nos parece cambiada en d en castellano (seda, de setam, rueda de rotam) y en francés desaparece por completo (soie, rue)
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 1375

data from the linked data cloud