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R

Resonant frequency

The frequency at which an acoustic system (including the vocal tract) vibrates when excited by input energy.


Resultative

A verb form that highlights the result of the event (rather than the cause or the process of becoming).


Retracted

Produced slightly further back in the vocal tract. For instance, the first consonant in the English word trip is a retracted alveolar (produced at the back of the alveolar ridge) because of the following [r] sound. Cf. advanced.


Retroflex

Consonant articulation involving the curled-up tip of the tongue and the back of the alveolar ridge or palate. Some speakers of English have retroflex approximants in rye and err. Retroflex stops occur in Hindi and other languages spoken in India.


Rhotacization

The auditory property known as r-coloring that results from the lowering of the third formant.


Rhyme

(Or: rime) The part of the syllable consisting of the vowel (nucleus) and the following consonant(s). In the English word cram, for instance, the rhyme is /am/.


Roll

See trill.


Root

The basic form from which another is derived by internal change or by addition of inflectional or derivational morphemes.


Root-and-pattern

A type of morphology found especially in the Semitic languages where roots consist of a series of consonants, and derived and inflected forms are created by superimposing the root on a vocalic pattern. The pattern may also include certain consonants, although these can sometimes be analyzed as prefixes or suffixes.


Round

A sound produced with protruded (=rounded) lips.



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