2 Pages

exercise1F

Course: CHAPTER 1, Fall 2009
School: UCLA
Rating:
 
 
 
 
 

Document Preview

Chapter Name_____________________ 1, exercise F. Complete the diagrams in Figure 1.16 below so as to illustrate the target for the gesture of the vocal organs for the first consonants in of each the following words. If the sound is voiced, schematize the vibrating vocal folds by a wavy line at the glottis. If it is voiceless, use a straight line. Example: mat day 1 2

Register Now

Unformatted Document Excerpt

Coursehero >> California >> UCLA >> CHAPTER 1

Course Hero has millions of student submitted documents similar to the one
below including study guides, practice problems, reference materials, practice exams, textbook help and tutor support.

Course Hero has millions of student submitted documents similar to the one below including study guides, practice problems, reference materials, practice exams, textbook help and tutor support.
Chapter Name_____________________ 1, ...
Find millions of documents on Course Hero - Study Guides, Lecture Notes, Reference Materials, Practice Exams and more. Course Hero has millions of course specific materials providing students with the best way to expand their education.

Below is a small sample set of documents:

UCLA - CHAPTER - 1
Name_ Chapter 1, exercise A A Fill in the names of the vocal organs numbered in Figure 1.14 below. 1. _ 2. _ 3. _ 4. _ 5. _ 6. _ 7. _ 8._ 9._ 10._ 11._ 12._ 13._ 14._
UCLA - CHAPTER - 1
Name _ Chapter 1 Exercise J J In the following sets of words the sound of the vowel is the same in every case but one. Circle the word that has a different vowel sound. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. pen said death mess mean meat steak weak theme green sane paid
UCLA - CHAPTER - 7
Name _Chapter 7 ExercisesThe exercises refer to the following table (1) Airstream Pulmonic Glottalic Velaric (2) Direction egressive ingressive (3) Glottis voiced voiceless murmured laryngealized closed (4) Tongue apical laminal (neither) (5) Plac
UCLA - CHAPTER - 1
Name_ Chapter 1, exercise E E Define the consonant sounds in the middle of each of the following words as indicated in the example: Voiced or voiceless adder father singing etching robber ether pleasure hopper selling sunny lodger Place of articulati
UCLA - CNRC - 03
FAST II: Algorithms and PerformanceCheng Jin David Wei Steven Low http:/netlab.caltech.eduTopicsData Control Window Burstiness Control Control Measurement Design Issues FAST (sc2002 version) Window Pacing Experimental ResultsDesign Is
UCLA - MG - 2009
Proper isometric actions of wreath productsAlain VALETTE (Neuchtel) a 13 January 2009This is a report on joint work with Y. de CORNULIER and Y. STALDER. We address the following question: how to embed a nitely generated group G equivariantly into L
UCLA - GSS - 2007
Grammar induction in computers and peopleAmy Perfors IPAM 2007Expressivity vs. learnabilityA fundamental tradeoff Low expressivity: easy to learn High expressivity: hard to learnExpressivity vs. learnabilityMaps onto modeling choices Low expre
UCLA - INVWS - 2
On Tikhonov Regularization Algorithms in Learning TheoryAndrea Caponnetto (DISI, Genova University) Lorenzo Rosasco (DISI) Ernesto Devito (Modena University) Michele Piana (DIMA, Genova University) Alessandro Verri (DISI)PlanNotation Part I: gen
UCLA - GC - 2008
Multiresolution Graph Cut Methods in Image Processing and Gibbs EstimationB. A. Zalesky121. Plan of Talk1. Introduction 2. Multiresolution Network Flow Minimum Cut Algorithm 3. Integer Minimization of Modular Functions 4. Integer Minimization
UCLA - EG - 2008
PROPERTY AND HYPERBOLIC 3-MANIFOLDS Alan W. Reid1Property Let be a group, S a finite symmetric set of generators of . Let L = {Ni } be a family of finite index (normal) subgroups of . Say has Property with respect to L if the quotient Cayley
UCLA - SGPWS - 1
UCLA - OTWS - 1
Optimal Dirichlet regions for mass transportation problems and for elliptic equationsGiuseppe Buttazzo Dipartimento di Matematica Universit` di Pisa a buttazzo@dm.unipi.it http:/cvgmt.sns.itAspects of Optimal Transport in Geometry and Calculus of V
UCLA - RIPS - 2008
Automatic Target Recognition (ATR) with Submarine Periscope Imagery Aret Associates RIPS 2008 1. Objective Demonstrate the feasibility of automatic target recognition (ATR) with periscope imagery by implementing a suite of ATR algorithms, applying th
UCLA - GSS - 2007
From Causal Models to Analogical InferenceKeith Holyoak Dept. of Psychology University of California, Los Angeles911, Analogy Police State your bad analogyRecent Review Holyoak, K. J. (2005). Analogy. In K. J. Holyoak & R. G. Morrison (Eds.), T
UCLA - INVWS - 2
On neareld acoustic holographyVictor Isakov1 February 20, 20041IntroductionLet be a bounded domain in Rn , n = 2, 3, with the Lipschitz boundary and connected complement + = Rn \ . We consider the acoustical pressure eld u of frequency k sat
UCLA - HU - 2007
On the Distribution of Subsidence in the Hurricane EyeW.H. Schubert, C.M. Rozoff, J.L.Vigh, B.D. McNoldy, J.P. KossinIPAM: The Hurricane 12 February 2007Hub Clouds, Moats, and Warm RingsSimpson, R.H., and L.G. Starrett, 1955: Bull. Amer. Meteor
UCLA - SCWS - 1
Group Structure of Elliptic Curves over Finite FieldsIgor E. ShparlinskiMacquarie University2IntroductionNotationIFq = nite eld of q elements. An elliptic curve IE is given by a Weierstra equation over IFq or Q y 2 = x3 + Ax + B (if gcd(q, 6)
UCLA - INVWS - 1
IMAGE DECONVOLUTIONM.Bertero DISI Universit di GenovaInverse Problems: Computational Methods and Emerging Applications IPAM October 16, 2003Outline1 - Introduction 2 - Mathematical modeling of image formation 2.1 Linear and space-invariant m
UCLA - SGPWS - 3
UCLA - EG - 2008
Pro-nite properties and property TauMartin KassabovFebruary 11, 2008Pro-nite properties andproperty Tau p. 1/1Pro-nite propertiesPro-nite properties andproperty Tau p. 2/1Pro-nite propertiesDenition A property P dened for nitely generate
UCLA - DS - 2006
How Document Space is like an ElephantDavid J. Marchette dmarchette@gmail.comNaval Surface Warfare Center Code B1025th January 2006Document SpaceWhat is Document Space? My talk will discuss this. I wont: Tell you about my particular algorithm.
UCLA - MGA - 2004
Construction of Slepian functions on the sphereLuisa Miranian Department of Mathematics, UC Berkeley1Classical dual problems Recover a band-limited signal given its values on a certain compact interval in space Recover (or approximate) a spa
UCLA - ATM - 2002
One-Dimensional Stochastic Simulation of Turbulence-Microscale InteractionsAlan KersteinCombustion Research Facility Sandia National Laboratories Livermore, CA Contributors:Wm. T. Ashurst, T. D. Dreeben, T. Echekki, J. C. Hewson, V. Nilsen, R. C.
UCLA - CH - 08
Student Activities Manual 8 . Listening exercises 1. ? O.Kagan F. Miller G.Kudyma81. . Pronounce after the speaker words containing the sounds "hard " and "soft ". Note that the sound "hard " resembles the "l" sound in the Englis
UCLA - CH - 02
Student Activities Manual 2 O.Kagan F. Miller G.Kudyma . Listening xercises 2. 2-18. . 1. What does one have to do to get into a Russian university? _ 2. Do Russian students take oral or written exams? _ 3. When are they going to
UCLA - CH - 09
Student Activities Manual 9. . Listening exercises 1. O.Kagan F. Miller G.Kudyma91. . Pronunciation of individual words. Simplification of consonant clusters. Listen to the speaker, and note how the following words are pronounced. SPEL
UCLA - CH - 01
Student Activities Manual 1 ! O.Kagan F. Miller G.Kudyma . Listening xercises T 2. 1-21. . A true measure of your language ability is your comprehension of a conversation not directed at you. You have overheard these conversations.
UCLA - CH - 02
Student Activities Manual 2 O.Kagan F. Miller G.Kudyma . Listening xercises 3. !2-33. : . Listen to the following lecture about how Russians greet each other. What are some common greetings that Russians use? .. 1. What does
UCLA - CH - 03
Student Activities Manual 3 O.Kagan F. Miller G.Kudyma . Listening xercises 3. 3-39. . Listen and answer the questions below. 1. What did her grandfather do? .. 2. Where was he born and where did he first go to school? .. 3. How
UCLA - CH - 08
Student Activities Manual 8 . Listening exercises 3 O.Kagan F. Miller G.Kudyma8-21. . Listen and write down a question that will help you clarify what you haven't heard clearly. 1. - .. 2. - . 3. - . 4. - . 5. - .. 6. - . 7. - .
UCLA - CH - 03
Student Activities Manual 3 O.Kagan F. Miller G.Kudyma . Listening xercises 3. 3-40. . . : - orphan - orphanage 1. How many children were adopted in February? .. 2. When was the first time that a Russian child was a
UCLA - CH - 02
Student Activities Manual 2 O.Kagan F. Miller G.Kudyma . Listening xercises 2. 2-17. . Listen to the letter and answer the questions. 1. What subjects is she taking this year? __ 2. Where did her English instructor go to school? _
UCLA - CH - 04
Student Activities Manual 4. . Listening xercises 1. 41. . O.Kagan F. Miller G.KudymaA. Voiced consonants devoice, i.e. are pronounced voiceless at the end of a word. Listen to the following pronunciations. Note the pronunciatio
UCLA - GEOG - 597
Uneven Development and Beyond: Regional Development Theory in Post-Mao China*C. CINDY FANFrom Maoist redistributive policies1 to Dengs uneven development model to the current Ninth Five-Year Plan (19962000), Chinese regional policy has undergone s
UCLA - GEOG - 597
CURRICULUM VITAE C. CINDY FANNovember 2007Professor, Department of Geography Professor, Department of Asian American Studies University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) Box 951524, 1255 Bunche Los Angeles, CA 90095-1524Telephone: Fax: E-mail:
UCLA - GEOG - 297
Paper 277 DiscGlacier outburst floods and outwash plain development: Skeiararsandur, IcelandB. Gomez1*, L.C. Smith2, F.J. Magilligan3, L.A.K. Mertes4 and N.D. Smith51Geomorphology Laboratory, Indiana State University, Terre Haute, IN 47809, U.
UCLA - GEOG - 634
GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, VOL. 32, L08703, doi:10.1029/2005GL022478, 2005Variations in the Pacific Decadal Oscillation over the past millenniumGlen M. MacDonald and Roslyn A. CaseDepartment of Geography, University of California, Los Angeles,
UCLA - GEOG - 297
GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, VOL. 32, L09401, doi:10.1029/2004GL022025, 2005Amplified carbon release from vast West Siberian peatlands by 2100Karen E. Frey1 and Laurence C. Smith1,2Received 17 November 2004; revised 7 March 2005; accepted 7 Apri
UCLA - GEOG - 297
Click HereGLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES, VOL. 21, GB1016, doi:10.1029/2006GB002706, 2007Full ArticleforHow well do we know northern land cover? Comparison of four global vegetation and wetland products with a new ground-truth database for West
UCLA - GEOG - 634
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN WATER RESOURCES ASSOCIATIONJUNE AMERICAN WATER RESOURCES ASSOCIATION 2003TREE RING RECONSTRUCTIONS OF STREAMFLOW FOR THREE CANADIAN PRAIRIE RIVERS1Roslyn A. Case and Glen M. MacDonald2ABSTRACT: Information regarding lon
UCLA - GEOG - 297
Geomorphology 75 (2006) 65 75 www.elsevier.com/locate/geomorphGeomorphic impact and rapid subsequent recovery from the 1996 Skeiararsandur jokulhlaup, Iceland, measured with multi-year airborne lidarLaurence C. Smith a,*, Yongwei Sheng b, Franc
UCLA - GEOG - 297
BREVIADisappearing Arctic LakesL. C. Smith,1* Y. Sheng,2 G. M. MacDonald,1 L. D. Hinzman3ronments, driven primarily by slumping and Arctic warming has accelerated since the collapsed terrain features (thermokarst) that 1980s, driving an array of c
UCLA - GEOG - 297
Click HereJOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 112, G04S58, doi:10.1029/2006JG000369, 2007Full ArticleforImpacts of climate warming and permafrost thaw on the riverine transport of nitrogen and phosphorus to the Kara SeaKaren E. Frey,1 Jame
UCLA - GEOG - 297
UCLA - GEOG - 163
UCLA - GEOG - 163
UCLA - GEOG - 163
UCLA - GEOG - 297
Supplementary online material for Disappearing Arctic Lakes, by Laurence C. Smith, Yongwei Sheng, Glen M. MacDonald, and Larry D. Hinzman (Methods, SOM text, References and Notes)Methods In July 1972, the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Adminis
UCLA - GEOG - 297
Click HereGEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, VOL. 35, L08403, doi:10.1029/2008GL033268, 2008Full ArticleforRemote sensing of hydrologic recharge in the Peace-Athabasca Delta, CanadaTamlin M. Pavelsky1 and Laurence C. Smith1Received 11 January 20
UCLA - GEOG - 297
CURRICULUM VITAE: LAURENCE C. SMITHMy scientific research focuses on the impacts of global warming and environmental change upon northern environments. To date, four research themes have emerged in my work: [1] high-latitude river systems, includin
UCLA - GEOG - 297
GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, VOL. 30, NO. 20, 2034, doi:10.1029/2003GL017641, 2003Melting of small Arctic ice caps observed from ERS scatterometer time seriesLaurence C. Smith,1,2 Yongwei Sheng,1 Richard R. Forster,3 Konrad Steffen,4 Karen E. Fre
UCLA - GEOG - 297
Control on sediment and organic carbon delivery to the Arctic Ocean revealed with space-borne synthetic aperture radar: Ob' River, SiberiaLaurence C. SmithDepartment of Geog raphy, University of California, Los Ang eles, Box 951524, Bunche Hall, Lo
UCLA - GEOG - 856
Ethics & Global PoliticsBorders on the mind: re-framing border thinkingJohn Agnew*Department of Geography, UCLA, USAAbstractFrom one viewpoint, interstate borders are simple `artefacts on the ground'. Borders exist for a variety of practical r
UCLA - GEOG - 297
UCLA - CS - 35
Change Management NotesWeek 4Patching Read man patch patch pNUM b <patch -p strips the smallest prefixing containing NUM leading slashes from each file name found in the patch file. In this case, you can use 0. -b tells patch to make a backup
UCLA - CS - 111
VIM QUICK REFERENCE CARD Basic movement h l k j . . . . . . . . . . . . character left, right; line up, down b w . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . word/token left, right ge e . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . end of wo
UCLA - CS - 111
CS111: OperatingSystemsPrinciples Teaching Assistant: Mike Welch Office: 4805 BH Email: welch@seas.ucla.edu Office Hours : MW 2:30-3:30 PM or by appointment. Lab Location: 4405 BH Book - Gary Nutt, Kernel Projects for Linux . Linux distribution Versi
UCLA - CS - 111
# Testing basic command execution # -sh.c/bin/grep fprintf(stderr, "cs111_spring05$ "); / error, preceded by 'cs111_spring05: '. perror("cs111_spring05: ");- # Testing redirection # -hellols: no_fi
UCLA - ESS - 200
ESS 200CLecture 8 The Bow Shock and MagnetosheathA shock is a discontinuity separating two different regimes in a continuous media. Shocks form when velocities exceed the signal speed in the medium. A shock front separates the Mach cone of a s
UCLA - ESS - 200
ESS200 CThe MagnetosphereLectures 10, 11, 12 C.T. Russell1The Dipole Magnetic Field For many purposes, the Earths magnetic field can be approximated by a dipole. In a spherical coordinate system with the polar axis along the magnetic dipole ax