Two towers were bombed on September 11, 2001. The death toll was 2,749 people. Hiroshima was bombed at August 6 and August 9, 1945. It is reported that 120,000 people died. By February 1915 to January 1916, 50,000 people died in Gallipoli, of which 28,150 were Australians. The Trojan War completely destroyed Troy in 400 BC. Good morning friends, classmates, and teachers. Thousands of people died on this particular day. These war acts are inspired by passion, greed, and revenge.
Linguistics is a systematic language study. Phonetics is a field of linguistics, a field of processing language media. It includes generation, transmission and reception of human voice. In order to generate sound, air flow mechanism is necessary. There are three major airflow mechanisms, such as pulmonary artery, glottis, and ventral side airflow mechanism. When the air flow mechanism is used for discharge it is called compression and it is called intrusive when it is used to draw in air. Most of the sounds in most languages of the world are produced by a stirring airflow mechanism. The authors explain in detail the various organs responsible for converting the lung gas into sound before entering the air. For example, say long sss, long zzzz, long ffff, long vvvv, you can see two things at the same time.
As mentioned in the previous discussion of the language, phonological theory deals with the rules of combining words to make words. The sharpness is the physical production of speech. Voice is generated by changing the flow of air from the lungs. The way the speaker changes the airflow or change the position of the airflow determines the sound produced. The body structure of the speaker used to change the air flow through the channel is called an articulator. Some sounder is mobile, and some are not mobile. The articulator is shown in Table 2-1.
Phonetics, Speech Research and Its Physiological Production and Acoustic Characteristics It combines the composition of the channels used to generate speech (speech), the acoustic properties of speech (acoustic speech), and sounds into syllables, words and sentences (Language phonetics). The traditional way of describing speech is based on the movement of the organ of the voice that produced it. The main structure important in speech production is the lungs and respiratory system as well as the vocal organs shown in Figure 1. The airflow from the lungs travels between the vocal cords, which are two small streaks in the throat. It is at the top of the trachea. Glottis