Talk:Consonant voicing and devoicing
Sorry for starting this and leaving it in a very unfinished state. I came across this concept in my phonology textbook and was surprised to see that it is not covered on Wikipedia (at least not under this name). If this same concept (not voicelessness) is address under a different name, please feel free to redirect this page to the appropriated page (and transfer any non-duplicated info, of course). Some of the info here can be found here. Thanks.--Hraefen Talk 00:45, 30 September 2008 (UTC)
Suggestions for expansion
I'm not sure that all of these pages refer to devoicing as it is used here (many of them probably refer to the diachronic i.e. permanent change within a word from a voiced consonant to a voicelss consonant), but upon creating this page, some of the pages that contained the word "devoicing" were:
- Allophone
- Laiuse Romani
- Phonological history of English consonants
- Japanese phonology
- Bartholomae's law
- Plautdietsch
- Chaha language
- Zuni language
- Esperanto phonology
- Extensions to the IPA
- Ve (Cyrillic)
- Tübatulabal language
- Phonological change
- Yaqui language
- Bert Vaux
- Baraba language
- Yanesha' language
- Ceceo