Language Documentation Training Webinars 2023 - Week 3: Phonology (Sounds) & Orthography (Writing)
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- Опубликовано: 12 окт 2024
- This week in the language documentation webinar, we learned about how to document the phonology (sounds) of your language, and talk about different kinds of orthography (writing systems) that your language could use! 🗣️✍🏽
This week's session was led by Nathan Adamson, a PhD student in linguistics at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, and co-coordinator of the Language Documentation Training Center (www.ldtc.org).
You can find the slides and other materials for this week in the Google Drive folder: drive.google.c...
Thank you for the presentation
Very glad we can watch the rec
recording
I have had the joy and privilege to hear Nathan yesterday and I am happily re-listening to the webinar today. Thank you for making the recording available on RUclips. And thanks a million, Nathan Adamson for having covered a fascinating range of topics and having addressed some very challenging questions. This is a gem!
Is there a certificate for this training.
There is a certificate for folks who watch/attend all the sessions - please email anna@endangeredlanguages.com for more information 😄
Thank you for sharing your knowledge. I am about half way through your teaching. Do you have verbal or written instructions for ł (slash L) used in Diné bizaad ? One more question sound is the nasalized sounds. Thank you for your time and consideration. 🩵🪶
Hello! Happy to offer any information we can - to be sure we understand your questions, do you mean instructions for how to pronounce the ɬ sound? The ɬ in Diné Bizaad is called a "voiceless alveolar lateral fricative", which is a technical term for a non-voiced (your vocal folds aren't moving - if you touch your throat while saying it, you won't feel a buzz) sound, made by pushing air around the sides of your tongue while its tip is on the ridge of your gums, behind your top teeth. 🙂 For the nasalized sounds, are you wondering about ways to write them? Sorry for the long reply - you are also invited to write to Nathan at nathanwa@hawaii.edu for any other questions!