What do the curly bracket in this mean?
"eːi {oːi,aːi} → eː oː (?)"
Quick question about Phoneme transition
- KathTheDragon
- Smeric
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Re: Quick question about Phoneme transition
It's a set of inputs, here. So what that means is that both oːi and aːi go to oː
Re: Quick question about Phoneme transition
Right... So it's saying any "x" or "y" that i see turn into "a".
What about if it's in reverse... {a} > {x,y} does that mean either "x" or "y", or does it mean output as "xy"
What about if it's in reverse... {a} > {x,y} does that mean either "x" or "y", or does it mean output as "xy"
- Frislander
- Avisaru
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Re: Quick question about Phoneme transition
Either-or, though I'm not sure why you would use this notation unless you're just not bothering to specify the environment or it's a random distribution.Durakken wrote:What about if it's in reverse... {a} > {x,y} does that mean either "x" or "y", or does it mean output as "xy"
- KathTheDragon
- Smeric
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Re: Quick question about Phoneme transition
Or the exact distribution isn't yet known, which I have seen in the ID