phonation

NOUN
  1. the sound made by the vibration of vocal folds modified by the resonance of the vocal tract
    a singer takes good care of his voice
    the giraffe cannot make any vocalizations
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How To Use phonation In A Sentence

  • It makes no difference to the final product whether the condensation is the first step followed by sulphonation and consequent solubilisation of the intermediary insoluble product, or whether, vice versa, the sulphonic acid is subjected to condensation. Synthetic Tannins
  • Problems with phonation included 1 case with a breathy voice, 12 cases with persistent hoarseness , and total recovery in the remaining 13 cases. CONCLUSION: Laryngeal trauma is unusual.
  • When these insoluble azo colours are treated with sulphuric acid they are converted into sulpho acids, undergoing what is called sulphonation, an operation of the greatest (p. 067) importance and value in the preparation of dye-stuffs. The Dyeing of Woollen Fabrics
  • As a recap, I had come to a couple of major revelations on PIE that diverge from the "mainstream" but problematic view:One: The unlikely phonological system can finally be rationalized by turning palatal stops to plain ones and plain stops to uvular ones while shifting phonation to a contrast between creaky and plain voice rather than plain versus breathy. New pdf on Indo-European verbs
  • As regional bilingualism would eventually lead to a single dominant dialect, it seems to me that this would produce new Late IE dialects in those regions located outside of the "Late IE epicenter" within which breathy stops or vowels were replaced with locally more familiar modal phonation ie. substratal influence. Dialectal loss of PIE voiced aspirated stops via Para-MIE dialect merger?
  • Maybe I should add for completeness, that if Grassman's Law surfaced already during this hypothetical common "phonation shift" between Proto-Hellenic and Proto-Indo-Iranian, then forms like Greek títhēmi would have to be explained as resulting from analogical pressures that forced *d to devoice along with *dʰ in the underlying post-Grassman's-Law form, *dídʰehmi. Winter's Law in Balto-Slavic, "Hybrid Theory" and phonation - Part 2
  • Of aromatic acids all those which yield water-soluble sulphonation products seem suitable for the industrial production of tanning matters. Synthetic Tannins
  • The tongue is essential for speech / phonation, tasting, chewing, swallowing, suckling, and licking, but to do all of this it evolved to lie partially in the pharynx, where in humans it is at best a nuisance for breathing.
  • OH. COOH. which at higher temperatures is easily sulphonated with concentrated sulphuric acid; the sulphonation product represents a white solid, which easily dissolves in water forming a clear liquid. Synthetic Tannins
  • Mastication, swallowing, phonation, hearing, vision, and facial expression will be animated and seen in three dimensions.
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