Congratulations!Lyhoko Leaci wrote:1% SAE. I think.
I don't really understand why you are impressed by that. Could you explain?ObsequiousNewt wrote: Wait, with four fricatives? I'm impressed.
Congratulations!Lyhoko Leaci wrote:1% SAE. I think.
I don't really understand why you are impressed by that. Could you explain?ObsequiousNewt wrote: Wait, with four fricatives? I'm impressed.
Hmm, never really thought about it that way. I guess I am just so used to thinking of "v without w" as something exotic and foreign that it never occurred to me to consider that.Nortaneous wrote:yeah but on the other hand, every germanic language, every baltic language, every slavic language except polish, every uralic language in europe
Instead of "non-front, non-back" you could just re-write it as "no /ɨ ʍ ɘ/ or a high /ɤ/ pls".Nortaneous wrote:should change back to non-front in 22, i figured that was implied but khmer shouldn't get that point
Serafín wrote:Instead of "non-front, non-back" you could just re-write it as "no /ɨ ʍ ɘ/ or a high /ɤ/ pls".Nortaneous wrote:should change back to non-front in 22, i figured that was implied but khmer shouldn't get that point
anyway it's more like no /ɨ ɯ ɘ ɤ/ and for schwa it dependsSerafín wrote:ʍ
Because ɯ is a form of m and ʍ is a form of w, turned upside-down.Serafín wrote:Wrong X-SAMPA code, and I didn't bother reading the result. W instead of M--why are the shapes fucking reversed?? W = ʍ and M = ɯ.
I'm pretty sure that including the extra 45 points from all of the bonus questions, the total possible marks sum up to 100 anyway. So your percentage score would be:Grunnen wrote:Not sure how you get to the percentage, given the bonus questions at the end, but without those the score is 77%, and as I got all bonus points, I'm probably going to end up pretty close to 100%. But what would you expect from a language bordering French, German and English?
Ah, yes, that makes sense. ThanksZnex wrote:I'm pretty sure that including the extra 45 points from all of the bonus questions, the total possible marks sum up to 100 anyway. So your percentage score would be:Grunnen wrote:Not sure how you get to the percentage, given the bonus questions at the end, but without those the score is 77%, and as I got all bonus points, I'm probably going to end up pretty close to 100%. But what would you expect from a language bordering French, German and English?
87.5%
Funny, we get almost the same percentage, but we do not always have the same red lines. May I ask what region your accent comes from? Although perhaps the differences are more to do with a difference in analysis. That's still possible I suppose.Dē Graut Bʉr wrote:Lets see what I get if I do the test with my Dutch:
89.5%
Looks like it. I'm originally from Groningen myself, but people tend to be rather surprised when I tell them.Dē Graut Bʉr wrote:I'm from Brabant. Some of the differences are because of the slightly different accent, while others are indeed because of a difference in analysis.
Code: Select all
m n ɲ
p t tʃ k
b d dʒ g
s ʃ ç
β v z ʒ
ɹ l j
a ɛ œ ɔ e ø o i y u
au ɔu ai ɛi œy
(FCCL)V(LNCC) syllable structure
Phonemic stress, no harmony, vowels reduce to ɪ ɵ ɐ in unstressed syllables
E.g. /ʒdɹ̩nks/ [ʒdɹ̩ŋks], /pɹœylˈktoɲaβ/ [pɹɵlˈktoɲɐβ]
Hmmm, the last three aren't phonemic though, so maybe I need to add some extra vowels. Maybe ɪ ʊ ɐ are all phonemic vowels now and change the unstressed vowels: front vowels reduce to ɘ, back vowels reduce to ɵ and high vowels reduce to ə.ObsequiousNewt wrote:A vowel POA is a unique comination of frontness and height. You have ten POAs (or 13 if roundedness counts, which I think it doesn't), seven of which are phonemic: a, ɛ/œ, ɔ, e/ø, o, i/y, u, ɪ, ɵ, ɐ.