English, asked by kusaashwini, 4 months ago

phonitic language in people

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Answered by shreyao4o62009
1

Answer:

: of or relating to spoken language, speech sounds, or the science of phonetics. : representing each speech sound with a single symbol. : using a system of written symbols that represent speech sounds in a way that is very close to how they actually sound

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Answered by sarwa
0

Answer:

Than Spanish, Turkish and Korean are highly phonetic. And than we have Languages like English(the king, almost no phonetic worlds), French, Danish, Swedish, Chinese, etc. Why not all languages developed in such a way, so you can write as you talk.

Some languages are "phonetic". That means you can look at a written word and know how to pronounce it. Or you can hear a word and know how to spell it. With phonetic languages, there is a direct relationship between the spelling and the sound. ... So we often do not say a word the same way it is spelled.

Taa language

With five distinct kinds of clicks, multiple tones and strident vowels — vocalized with a quick choking sound — the Taa language, spoken by a few thousand people in Botswana and Namibia, is believed by most linguists to have the largest sound inventory of any tongue in the world.

The Central dialect of Rotokas possesses one of the world's smallest phoneme inventories. (Only the Pirahã language has been claimed to have fewer.) The alphabet consists of twelve letters, representing eleven phonemes.

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