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1

Moradi, Maryam. "THE ANALYSIS OF PHONETIC ELISION: APHAERESIS ELISION, SYNCOPE ELISION AND APOCOPE ELISSON IN ARABISMS IN RUSSIAN LANGUAGE IN THE PHONETIC PROCESS." Bulletin of Udmurt University. Series History and Philology 32, no. 2 (April 29, 2022): 198–206. http://dx.doi.org/10.35634/2412-9534-2022-32-2-198-206.

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Arabisms in the structure of Russian language are adapted and assimilated when emerging into the lexical system of Russian language as well as other loaned words. The goal of this article is to analyze the process of elision in Arabisms which emerged into Russian language via adaptation process. The material of article is The Arabisms of foreign language dictionary published in 1984 and edited by A.G. Spirkin. The method of research is comparative study. It is shown that elision in the Arabisms are seen in seven categories: Aphaeresis elision (two cases); Consonant syncope elision (twelve cases); vowel syncope elision (five cases); alveolar dental plosive voiceless consonant apocope elision in final position of last syllable (thirteen cases); apocope elision of Hamzah in the final position of last syllable (three cases); simultaneous apocope elision and lenition of other consonants (three cases); apocope elision of vowels (two cases).
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Firdhani, Anggi Rizky, Lia Maulia Indrayani, and Sutiono Mahdi. "THE USE OF CONSONANT ELISION BY SRI MULYANI DURING HER INTERVIEW SESSION WITH THE BANKER." ELTIN JOURNAL, Journal of English Language Teaching in Indonesia 6, no. 2 (October 30, 2018): 53. http://dx.doi.org/10.22460/eltin.v6i2.p53-58.

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This research is entitled “The Use of Consonant Elision by Sri Mulyani During Her Interview Session with The Banker”. The objects of this research are the consonant elisions that are produced by Sri Mulyani when she was interviewed by The Banker. The objectives of this research are to describe and analyze the frequency of consonant elision used by Sri Mulyani and to find out the phonemes that are often being elision-ed by Sri Mulyani in her interview with The Banker. The analysis of this research was done by using descriptive qualitative analysis method. This study uses Carr’s (2008), Giegerich’s (1992), and Roach’s (2001) theories about phonological rules and elision. This study shows that during her interview, Sri Mulyani uses consonant elision for 26 times and she tends to do the omission to the phoneme /t/ (19 times), /d/ (5 times), /r/ (1 times), and /s/ (1 times).
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3

Ryan, David. "Elision." New England Review 43, no. 2 (2022): 117–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/ner.2022.0053.

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Clark, James T. "Penthemimeral Elision in Tragic Trimeters." Philologus 165, no. 2 (November 4, 2021): 189–204. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/phil-2021-0104.

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Abstract This paper provides a statistical survey of the incidence of elision at the penthemimeral caesura in the iambic trimeters of Greek tragedy. It updates and builds on the work of Descroix (1931) by considering the rates of elision of different types of words: lexicals, nonlexical polysyllables, and nonlexical monosyllables. While all tragedians elide less at the caesura than throughout the line, in Aeschylus the rate of this reduction is far greater for lexicals and polysyllabic nonlexicals than it is for monosyllabic nonlexicals. On this evidence, and the evidence of interlinear elision, it is tentatively suggested that lexicals and nonlexical polysyllables should together be considered as the more constrained elisions. When the rates of constrained elision are examined, the difference between Aeschylus and later Euripides is revealed to be twice that obtained when bulk figures are used. This difference is attributed to a combination of Euripides’ adoption of more fluent phrasing towards the end of his career and the tragedians’ different approaches to compositional constraints.
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Kozák, Dániel. "Occult(um) Aeaciden: Elisions of gender in Statius’ Achilleid." Trends in Classics 11, no. 2 (February 25, 2020): 317–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/tc-2019-0018.

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AbstractIn this paper I am discussing some passages in Statius’ Achilleid, including the opening words of the poem, where some elisions seem to effectively suggest how gender and identity of Achilles become destabilized during his stay on Scyros in women’s clothes. The elisions to be discussed affect word endings indicative of the masculine grammatical gender; in some cases, moreover, these endings are not just muted but also replaced, as it were, by their feminine equivalents. I also examine one passage where the masculine endings are emphatically not silenced despite elision; and a pair of passages where tension between the masculine and the feminine is introduced into the text by conjecture rather than by elision.
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Owusu Ansah, Victoria. "Elision in Esahie." Ghana Journal of Linguistics 9, no. 2 (December 31, 2020): 22–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.4314/gjl.v9i2.2.

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One of the syllable structure changes that occur in rapid speech because of sounds influencing each other is elision. This paper provides an account of elision in Esahie, also known as Sehwi, a Kwa language spoken in the Western North region of Ghana. The paper discusses the processes involved in elision, and the context within which elision occurs in the language. The paper shows that sound segments, syllables and tones are affected by the elision process. It demonstrates that elision, though purely a phonological process, is influenced by morphological factors such as vowel juxtapositioning during compounding, and at word boundary. The evidence in this paper show that there is an interface between phonology and morphology when accounting for elision in Esahie. Data for this study were gathered from primary sources using ethnographic and stimuli methods.
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Taş, İsmail. "Elision In Turkish." Karabük Türkoloji Dergisi 3, no. 3 (July 31, 2021): 44–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.7596/katud.20102021.003.

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8

Mendicino, Kristina. "Places of Elision." MLN 129, no. 3 (2014): 585–605. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/mln.2014.0057.

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9

Caesar, Regina Oforiwah, and Mathias Sackitey. "Elision in Dangme." Journal of Universal Language 25, no. 1 (March 2024): 1–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.22425/jul.2024.25.1.1.

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10

NICOLADIS, ELENA, and JOHANNE PARADIS. "Learning to liaise and elide comme il faut: evidence from bilingual children*." Journal of Child Language 38, no. 4 (October 29, 2010): 701–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0305000910000231.

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ABSTRACTLiaison and elision in French are phonological phenomena that apply across word boundaries. French-speaking children make errors in contexts where liaison/elision typically occurs in adult speech. In this study, we asked if acquisition of French liaison/elision can be explained in a constructivist framework. We tested if children's liaison/elision was sensitive to co-occurrence and meaning. We expected children's use of liaison/elision to correlate with their experience with French (estimated by vocabulary). Thirty-one French-speaking children (twenty-five bilingual) between three and five years old produced familiar vowel-initial words, following four words: (1) un, (2) deux, (3) un petit and (4) beaucoup de. The children with smaller French vocabularies produced many vowel-initial words and some consonant-initial chunks. The children with larger French vocabularies produced liaison/elision correctly across several frames while associating a number interpretation with liaised consonants. These results suggest that children use a variety of cues to construct the appropriate use of liaison/elision.
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Saleem, Muzainah Awny. "A Study of Ellipsis and Elision in English." Journal of Tikrit University for Humanities 28, no. 2 (February 24, 2021): 60–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.25130/jtuh.28.2.2021.23.

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Ellipsis & elision are widespread phenomenon in English. Using ellipsis in spoken and written forms denotes mastery of the language whether in native or non-native language .Elision, on the other hand , shows how some sounds in connected speech can be omitted. This research presents a study of ellipsis and elision . It introduces some definitions of ellipsis and elision and its value in English language besides other subjects that are related with the title of the research. Section one is the introduction . Section two deals with ellipsis and an exclusive attempt to deal with ellipsis in embedded structures, concepts of ellipsis according to traditional, structural and transformational view . While section three deals with elision, its definition ,historic elision in English and its types . Section four is the conclusions followed by bibliography.
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Fitrat, Fraidoon, and Abdul Mohit Tebyan. "Investigating the Phoneme Elision Process in Dari Persian Dialect of Rustaq, Afghanistan." Sprin Journal of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences 2, no. 11 (November 2, 2023): 31–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.55559/sjahss.v2i11.181.

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The purpose of this study is to investigate the phoneme elision process in the Dari Persian dialect of the Rustaq district. Rustaq Persian dialect is one of the Dari Persian dialects that has been prevalent in this country since the distant past years. Today, investigating the phoneme elision process in various dialects has been the focus of many researchers; but no research can investigate the elision process in Rustaq Persian dialect yet. This problem encouraged the writer to investigate the phoneme elision process in the Rustaq Persian dialect by using the synchronic approach. This research has been done by descriptive-analytical method and the method of collecting data has been done by field research. In this research, we have interviewed 54 residents of Rustaq district. We analyzed the data after transcribing and categorizing. The findings of this research show that the people of Rustaq continuously omit some phonemes in their informal speech. Among the consonants in the elision process, the contribution of glottal-fricative consonant /h/ and glottal-plosive consonant /ʔ/ are more than other consonants. Among the vowels, short vowels are often exposed to the elision process. Elision of consonants mostly occurs in the boundary of two morphemes and at the end of the word, and elision of vowels mostly occurs in the middle of the word. The number of syllables in the word is reduced in the elision of vowels.
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Dice, Dave, Alex Kogan, and Yossi Lev. "Refined transactional lock elision." ACM SIGPLAN Notices 51, no. 8 (November 9, 2016): 1–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3016078.2851162.

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14

DeSendi, Isabella. "Sussex County, and: Elision." Appalachian Heritage 46, no. 1 (2018): 92–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/aph.2018.0024.

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Wulandari, Anak Agung, Ni Luh Ketut Mas Indrawati, and Ni Made Ayu Widiastuti. "A Phonological Analysis Of Elision Found In Sza’s Selected Songs In ‘SOS’ Album." International Journal of Linguistics and Discourse Analytics (ijolida) 5, no. 1 (September 30, 2023): 113–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.52232/ijolida.v5i1.83.

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Nowadays, songs have become the media that helps others to learn and improve their English skill and to influence people’s pronunciation. In songs, singers tend to not pronounce several sounds in words based on the conditions and their purposes. The deletion of the sounds in phonology is called elision. The nature of elision may be stated quite simply: under certain circumstances sounds disappear. One might express this in more technical language by saying that in certain circumstances a phoneme may be realised as zero, or have zero realisation (Roach, 1991). Thus, this study aims to find out the kinds of phonological elision that occur in SZA’s selected songs in “SOS” album. The data was taken from the speech sound that is pronounced by the singer SZA in her selected songs entitled “Open Arms”, “I Hate U”, and “Good Days”. The data were collected through observing the content and note taking technique by listening to the pronounced words in the songs. The findings are divided into three. There are vowel elision, consonant elision, and syllable elision. In vowel elision, there are two cases found, the first one is /ə/ (2 data) and second case is /ɪ/ (10 data). In consonant elision there are eight cases found, the first one is /t/ (17 data), second case /d/ (10 data), third and fourth cases /p/ and /r/ (2 data respectively), and fifth to seventh cases /v/, /z/, and /n/ are found only in one data respectively. In syllable elision there are three cases found , they are /bɪ/, /ən/, and /ɒm/.
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Wilmoth, Sasha, Rebecca Defina, and Debbie Loakes. "They Talk Muṯumuṯu: Variable Elision of Tense Suffixes in Contemporary Pitjantjatjara." Languages 6, no. 2 (April 7, 2021): 69. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/languages6020069.

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Vowel elision is common in Pitjantjatjara and Yankunytjatjara connected speech. It also appears to be a locus of language change, with young people extending elision to new contexts; resulting in a distinctive style of speech which speakers refer to as muṯumuṯu (‘short’ speech). This study examines the productions of utterance-final past tense suffixes /-nu, -ɳu, -ŋu/ by four older and four younger Pitjantjatjara speakers in spontaneous speech. This is a context where elision tends not to be sociolinguistically or perceptually salient. We find extensive variance within and between speakers in the realization of both the vowel and nasal segments. We also find evidence of a change in progress, with a mixed effects model showing that among the older speakers, elision is associated with both the place of articulation of the nasal segment and the metrical structure of the verbal stem, while among the younger speakers, elision is associated with place of articulation but metrical structure plays little role. This is in line with a reanalysis of the conditions for elision by younger speakers based on the variability present in the speech of older people. Such a reanalysis would also account for many of the sociolinguistically marked extended contexts of elision.
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T., Opoola Bolanle, and Olaide Oladimeji. "Vowel Elision in Ikhin, an Edoid Language in South-south Nigeria." Journal of Language Teaching and Research 12, no. 3 (May 1, 2021): 352–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.17507/jltr.1203.04.

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In this paper, attention is on the basic factors that come into force in determining whether or not vowel will elide and which of the V1 and V2 in a sequence should disappear in any environment. This paper also examines the phonological, morphological and syntactic reasons behind vowel elision as a syllable structure process in Ikhin language. As in the case of related African languages that have been previously described by various scholars, this paper presents how vowel elision works in Ikhin and the problems arising from its analysis. In this study, the focus is on the explanation and analysis of factors such as boundary, morpheme structure and vowel quality which actually determine whether or not elision should take place in Ikhin. Apart from factors such as vowel quality and boundary, one other factor with respect to elision or glide formation is the syllable structure of the verbs and nouns in Ikhin. Ikhin nouns are either disyllabic i.e. V(C)V or trisyllabic, etc. It is argued that the operation of vowel elision is blocked in disyllabic nouns as /i/, /o/ and /u/ form glides when either of them occurs as V1 whereas vowel elision rather than glide formation takes place in trisyllabic nouns. The study concludes based on data not previously discussed in the language that elision is driven by syllable-based and syntactic-based analyses and that a major strategy of discouraging vowel cluster in Ikhin is vowel elision because the syllable structure of the language prohibits cluster of vowels within word or across word boundary.
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NGOZI EZE, AUGUSTINA, CHRISTOPHER CHINEDU NWIKE, and CHIKA EZEUDO. "INFLUENCE OF VOWEL ASSIMILATION AND ELISION IN THE SPELLING OF SOME IGBO NAMES." International Journal of Language, Linguistics, Literature, and Culture 02, no. 04 (2023): 41–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.59009/ijlllc.2023.0032.

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This study examined how the spelling of some Igbo names are affected by vowel assimilation and elision. It used names that people answer in Igbo clan, precisely, from the Department of Linguistics, University of Nigeria, Nsukka in the 2020/2021 academic session to carry out the study. This study's main goal was to examine the influence of vowel assimilation and elision on the spelling of some Igbo words. The form of vowel assimilation and elision that are so pronounced in Igbo names served as the basis for the discussion of this study. This study used names of student in Linguistics Department, from year one to three, while the entire students, from year one to four formed the population of this study. This study, due to its nature, adopted a descriptive survey design to achieve the aim upon which this study is set. This study found that either elision or assimilation of Igbo names occurs as a result of quick speech, while articulating some Igbo names. This study also reveals how prevalent vowel elision and regressive, as well as complete assimilations are in Igbo names. This is due to vowel assimilation or elision occurring in the same point.
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Heinen, Dustin. "Poetics of Elision in theSiluae." Illinois Classical Studies, no. 38 (October 20, 2013): 159–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illiclasstud.38.0159.

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Afek, Yehuda, Amir Levy, and Adam Morrison. "Programming with hardware lock elision." ACM SIGPLAN Notices 48, no. 8 (August 23, 2013): 295–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2517327.2442552.

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Khatamifard, S. Karen, Ismail Akturk, and Ulya R. Karpuzcu. "On Approximate Speculative Lock Elision." IEEE Transactions on Multi-Scale Computing Systems 4, no. 2 (April 1, 2018): 141–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/tmscs.2017.2773488.

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Smith, Neil Thomas. "Elision - Elision: world-line. Richard Barrett, Timothy McCormack, Liza Lim. Huddersfield Contemporary Records, HCR21CD." Tempo 74, no. 294 (September 1, 2020): 100–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040298220000571.

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Kozhina, Natalya V., and Tatiana V. Shuiskaya. "PECULIARITIES IN CONSONANTS PRONUNCIATION IN THE SPEECH OF 3,6-3,9 YEAR-OLD CHILDREN." Theoretical and Applied Linguistics, no. 3 (2017): 5–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.22250/2410-7190_2017_3_3_5_16.

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The current paper focuses upon the results of an acoustic study of consonant substitution and elision cases in the speech of ten Russian normally developing 3,6-3,9 year-old children. 2580 occurrences of consonants were studied by means of dynamic spectrograms. Compared to the data obtained from the same subjects half a year ago, the proportion of consonant substitution and elision instances remained the same with the considerable prevalence of the former. As expected, the number of both substitution and elision cases was reduced compared to the one noticed 6 months ago. Only forelingual consonants were subjected to elision while labial, mediolingual and velar consonants were not omitted at all. Substitution of /r/ and /ʃ/ were among the most frequent.6
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صالح, يوسف عبد الكريم. "The Elision of the Excessive Letter in Al-Muhkam wal-Muheet ul-A'adham (The Gerund and the Participle) as Examples." JOURNAL OF LANGUAGE STUDIES 4, no. 3 (October 13, 2023): 185–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.25130/jls.4.3.12.

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This paper explores the elision of the excessive letter in two derivations in Arabic morphology, namely: the gerund and the participle. In his great lexicon: Al-Muhkam wal-Muheet ulA'adham the outstanding linguist Ibnu Seeda al-Andalusi. Ibnu Seeda used two terms related to the excessive letters; they are: "elision" and "subtractions" and he suggested elision of the excessive letter in the gerund and the participle. In the examples he presented, Ibnu Seeda suggested the omission of the excessive letters.
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Kupchik, John E. "Hypermetricality and Synchronic Vowel Elision in Hiatus Contexts in Eastern Old Japanese Poetry." Cahiers de Linguistique Asie Orientale 42, no. 1 (2013): 2–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15685322-0421p0002.

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This study examines hypermetricality and synchronic vowel elision in hiatus contexts in Eastern Old Japanese poetry, as attested in books 14 and 20 of the Man’yōshū poetry anthology. I argue that the typologically rare V2 elision is the default type of elision in Eastern Old Japanese. In contrast, V1 elision in Eastern Old Japanese is only attested in those cases where the vowel sequences [ia] or [ua] are found in hiatus. For that reason, I argue that the trigger for V1 elision is a maximal increase in sonority from V1 to V2. Cet article traite des phénomènes d’hypermétricalité et d’élision synchronique des voyelles dans des contextes de hiatus dans la poésie en japonais ancien de l’Est, attestés notamment dans les livres 14 et 20 de l’anthologie poétique Man’yōshū. Il est montré que l’élision de V2, typologiquement rare, est le type d’élision par défaut en japonais ancien de l’Est. En revanche, l’élision de V1 en japonais ancien n’est attestée que dans les cas où les séquences vocaliques [ia] ou [ua] apparaissent dans des contextes de hiatus. Pour cette raison, il est montré que l’élision de V1 est due à une augmentation maximale du degré de sonorité de V1 à V2.
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Bolozky, Shmuel. "The Phonology of connected speech in Israeli Hebrew." Brill’s Journal of Afroasiatic Languages and Linguistics 11, no. 1 (June 12, 2019): 201–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18776930-01101013.

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Abstract Connected speech is a natural, continuous stream of sounds, as in normal conversation, in which natural phonetically-motivated processes optimize articulation (through assimilation, elision, etc.), but are still constrained by the need to maintain morpho-semantic transparency at the receiving end. This paper discusses connected speech in Israeli Hebrew, based mostly on data from a spoken corpus. The paper starts with consonant assimilation (voicing assimilation and total assimilation), and then concentrates on various reduction phenomena: vowel elision or reduction, elision of consonants (with or without adjacent vowels), and the “expanded” elision of multiple segments and even complete morphemes and words. As long as the entity targeted is frequent enough, it can easily be reconstructed from the context by the hearer. We proceed to discuss prosodic phenomena in connected speech: pre-tonic lengthening, whose scope seems to be expanding today, and rhythmic secondary stress alternation.
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Wee, Lian Hee. "Casual speech elision and tone sandhi in Tianjin trisyllabic sequences." International Journal of Chinese Linguistics 1, no. 1 (September 5, 2014): 71–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/ijchl.1.1.03wee.

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In the Tianjin dialect, casual utterance of familiar trisyllabic sequences often induces deletion of phonological segments so that for a trisyllabic string, the non-final syllables would merge into a single syllable. This elide-and-merge process interacts with the rich Tianjin tone sandhi system to produce rather complicated patterns. In this paper, casual speech elision is shown to fall out straightforwardly from a model that recognizes morae as associated with segments and also as tone-bearing units. Thus, elision of morae also removes tonal features. While this understanding provides a clear description of the patterns, it also reveals an ordering paradox: sandhi applies before elision in some cases, but after elision in others. The paradox is resolved by favoring the order that produces a contour tone for the merged syllable. An explanation for this can be found if one recognizes that Tianjin is prosodically iambic.
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28

Azofra Sierra, María. "The Role of Elision in Evolutionary Processes." Languages 4, no. 1 (February 17, 2019): 12. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/languages4010012.

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Changes by elision—as well as those due to processes of adfunctionalization or refunctionalization—must be taken into account as explanatory mechanisms of linguistic change. In this paper, we study the role of elision in the theoretical overview of explanatory theories of language change by focusing on the evolutionary process of the Spanish adverb aparte. We analyze the consequences of the elision of an initial construction for the development of new functions as an exceptive or additive adverb, and as an additive connector with a specific meaning, conditioned by the evolution of the entire construction. We find that, in this case, the ellipsis of a verbal element has led to important modifications of the preserved item (aparte), not only at the semantic-pragmatic and functional levels but also in its category membership.
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29

Shuiskaya, Tatiana V. "ELISION IN 3-YEAR-OLDS SPEECH." Theoretical and Applied Linguistics 3, no. 2 (2017): 104–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.22250/2410-7190_2017_3_2_104_112.

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30

Riggsby, Andrew M. "Elision and Hiatus in Latin Prose." Classical Antiquity 10, no. 2 (October 1, 1991): 328–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/25010955.

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31

Chabbi, Milind, Wim Lavrijsen, Wibe de Jong, Koushik Sen, John Mellor-Crummey, and Costin Iancu. "Barrier elision for production parallel programs." ACM SIGPLAN Notices 50, no. 8 (December 18, 2015): 109–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2858788.2688502.

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32

Sulkin, Liza. "Russian elision as lenition to zero." Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America 9, no. 1 (May 15, 2024): 5656. http://dx.doi.org/10.3765/plsa.v9i1.5656.

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While there has been extensive documentation of elision in colloquial Russian speech, there is minimal phonetic research on its underlying causes. The present study performs an exploratory acoustic analysis on spontaneous Russian speech and ties its phonetic correlates to previously described lenition processes by demonstrating their continuous nature. Special attention is given to /v/ due to its sonorant-like qualities in Russian. Furthermore, the study uses the results of this analysis to propose a framework for predicting elided forms using both language-general processes alongside word frequency.
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KUPCHIK, John. "Morpheme-Based Rendaku as a Rhythmic Stabilizer in Eastern Old Japanese Poetry." Acta Linguistica Asiatica 2, no. 1 (May 22, 2012): 9–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.4312/ala.2.1.9-22.

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This paper explores the functions of morpheme-based rendaku, or “sequential voicing”, in Eastern Old Japanese poetry, with a focus on its function of maintaining rhythmic stability in poetic verse. It is argued that this function is implemented to avoid a hypermetrical line when no adjacent vowels exist as candidates for synchronic elision. Furthermore, a comparison with synchronic vowel elision is conducted. Based on the results, it is argued that morpheme-based rendaku is preferred to synchronic vowel elision when both are available options for maintaining the rhythmic stability of a line. Linguistic constraints blocking morpheme-based rendaku are also discussed to explain hypermetrical examples with potential, yet unrealized, morpheme-based rendaku.
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34

Issa, Katya. "Elisions in Spoken Language and Their Impact on the Bulgarian Language Spoken by Second-Generation Emigrants." Journal of Bulgarian Language 71, PRIL (March 30, 2024): 262–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.47810/bl.71.24.pr.17.

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The article examines various manifestations of elision in the oral speech of Bulgarian emigrants living in Sydney, Australia. Parts of informal conversations recorded in a domestic setting, using the involved observation method, are presented. Many elisions prevail in them (in the speech of the first generation), in some words without exception, and these words are perceived by the children (second generation) who were born abroad or left very young with their families, as the only (“correct”) option of the correct speaking. Since native Bulgarian abroad often functions only in its oral form and is practiced only within family and friendly gatherings, the children get the impression that these words are spelled the same way and have no other spelling options. Morphological, syntactic, stylistic, and phonetic interferences were found in the speech of the second generation of emigrants. The deformation is also reinforced by Bulgarian lexemes mutilated by elisions.
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35

Novikov, D. A. "Role of elision water exchange in formation of the Yamalo-Kara depression hydrodynamic field." Литология и полезные ископаемые, no. 3 (May 31, 2019): 248–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.31857/s0024-497x20193248-261.

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The unique material has been compiled on the hydrodynamics of oil and gas deposits of the Yamalo-Kara Depression for the first time in the last 30 years. The main feature of the region is the wide development of abnormally high formation pressures (Ka to 2.21) in both Jurassic and Lower Cretaceous horizons. Studying the filtration-capacitive properties and hydrodynamic characteristics of the Jurassic-Cretaceous reservoirs allows to established the predominate role of the elision water exchange in the formation of the modern hydrodynamic structure. At the depth of about 2–2.5 km elisional lithostatic system begins to acquire the features of elisional thermo-dehydration system. The extensive zones of piezomaxima (Bolshekhetskaya and Karskaya megasyneclise) at the present stage of development of the water-pressure basin system became internal areas of water pressure (supply) with a maximum degree of hydrogeological closeness. The vast zones of piezomaxima (the Bolshekhetskaya and Karskaya megasyneclises) became the inner regions of water pressuring (feeding) with the maximal degree of hydrogeological closeness of the interior at the current stage of the development of the water-pressure system in the basin. The areas of piezominima extending along the main sites of oil and gas generation are related to the largest zones of oil and gas accumulation (Vankoro-Suzunskaya, Bovanenkovskaya, Urengoyskaya and others). Currently, two types of natural water-pressure systems has been established in the region under investigation: elision in the inner regions (dominating within the Yamalo-Kara depression) and infiltration — in the basin margins of the West Siberian sedimentary basin.
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36

Dlamini, Sizwe Zwelakhe. "The artistic significance of vowel elision and ellipsis in Mqapheli Mngadi’s cartoons." International Journal of Research in Business and Social Science (2147- 4478) 12, no. 5 (July 28, 2023): 402–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.20525/ijrbs.v12i5.2609.

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This paper examines vowel elision and ellipsis in Mqapheli Mngadi’s cartoons. It intends to explore how these two aspects are employed by Mngadi for artistic effects in his cartoons. Even though vowel elision and ellipsis have been widely explored, there has not been a study, to the best of the researcher’s knowledge, that considers these aspects in Mngadi’s cartoons. The study is done literary, and it adopts literary stylistics as a theoretical framework.
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37

Androsova, Svetlana V., Svetlana I. Guseva, Svetlana V. Derkach, and Olga N. Morozova. "Elision in spontaneous speech (based on English)." Vestnik Tomskogo gosudarstvennogo universiteta, no. 413 (December 1, 2016): 5–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.17223/15617793/413/1.

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38

Marotta, Giovanna. "Luigia Garrapa, Vowel elision in Florentine Italian." Forum Italicum: A Journal of Italian Studies 48, no. 2 (July 11, 2014): 318–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0014585814529239.

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39

Washick, James. "The Elision of Christ in Mary Reilly." Christianity & Literature 44, no. 2 (March 1995): 169–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/014833319504400205.

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40

Turner, Katherine. "Lexically Conditioned Vowel Elision in Antoniaño Salinan." International Journal of American Linguistics 54, no. 4 (October 1988): 469. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/466098.

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41

Fagan, David S. "Nasal Elision and Universals: Evidence from Romance." Canadian Journal of Linguistics/Revue canadienne de linguistique 35, no. 3 (September 1990): 225–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0008413100013700.

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The postulation of diachronic universals derives from certain conclusions reached in the investigation of synchronic universals, i.e., that there are natural (universal) phonological subsystems in languages or dialects, and that there are natural (universal) structural relationships between the elements in these subsystems. In essence, a hypothesis about a particular diachronic universal is a claim that a shared natural state in various languages or dialects is the product of the same diachronic process (a sound change, series of linked sound changes, etc.). A counterproposal to this hypothesis would specify that there are multiple diachronic routes which can link two parallel states in the history of two or more innovating languages or dialects. If the latter view is correct, and I believe that it is, then the theory of diachronic universals will require refinement if it is to retain theoretical value.
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42

Schokkin, Dineke. "Variable realisation of verb-final /n/ in Idi." Variation in the Pacific 7, no. 1 (June 9, 2021): 1–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/aplv.19011.sch.

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Abstract The present study reports on verb-final variable realisation of the alveolar nasal /n/ in the Papuan language Idi. Elision of /n/ is correlated with both linguistic and social factors: present tense, a following consonant, and speakers over 60 show significantly greater rates of /n/ elision. Data from a 1988 grammar sketch indicate that for the present tense, variable realisation of verb-final /n/ is a case of stable, and perhaps age-graded, variation. Conversely, spread of n-less-ness into the other tenses may be a case of a change-in-progress, but at present this cannot clearly be confirmed. The older generation (speakers over 60) consistently show the highest rates of /n/ elision in all tenses. Elderly people are seen as the most proficient Idi speakers, and their position in society perhaps allows them to be more variable in their language use.
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43

Hadiyatulloh, Rifqi, Ekaning Dewanti Laksmi, and Suharyadi Suharyadi. "Investigating EFL Teachers’ Difficulties in Connected Speech." Jurnal Pendidikan: Teori, Penelitian, dan Pengembangan 6, no. 9 (September 15, 2021): 1376. http://dx.doi.org/10.17977/jptpp.v6i9.14983.

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<p class="Abstrak"><strong>Abstract:</strong> English teachers must have adequtae knowledge of pronunciation like phonetics and phonology. They also must be able to perform a good speaking performance as they must be linguistic models for their students in the class. This study investiagted several phonological aspects of connected speech such as linking, elision, and assimilation by EFL English teachers. The result revealed that assimilation was the most difficult phonological aspects of connected speech rather than linking or elision. The major difference between English and native language of the teachers could be the main reason of their contrains related to connected speech aspects.</p><strong>Abstrak:</strong> Guru bahasa Inggris harus memiliki pengetahuan yang memadai tentang pengucapan seperti fonetik dan fonologi. Mereka juga harus mampu berbicara dengan baik karena mereka harus menjadi panutan bagi siswa mereka di kelas. Penelitian ini menyelidiki beberapa aspek fonologis dari <em>connected speech</em>, seperti <em>linking, elision</em>, dan <em>assimilation </em>oleh guru bahasa Inggris. Hasil penelitian menunjukkan bahwa asimilasi merupakan aspek fonologis yang paling sulit daripada linking atau elision. Perbedaan utama antara bahasa Inggris dan bahasa pertama guru bisa menjadi alasan utama kendala yang dialami mereka terkait dengan aspek tersebut.
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Lindsey, Kate L. "Ende oration and final /n/-realisation." Variation in the Pacific 7, no. 1 (June 9, 2021): 30–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/aplv.19013.lin.

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Abstract This paper presents a sociophonetic analysis of word-final /n/-elision in Ende (Pahoturi River; Papuan). An analysis of 73 speakers reveals that tense, phonological context, and most significantly, whether or not the speaker is a kawa practitioner, a prestigious type of public oration, are significantly correlated with /n/-retention. A closer look at just five kawa practitioners reveals that age and genre may also play a role. The present study matches Schokkin’s analysis of /n/-elision in Idi (this issue). Indeed, the findings support her conclusions that this pattern is one of /n/-elision (not /n/-addition) and show similarities in conditioning factors. Analysing sociolinguistic variation in this region presents a unique set of benefits and challenges. This paper discusses how emically-derived categories relating to age, clan, and orator status may deviate from characterisations of prestige in Westernised and urbanised societies but better fit southern New Guinea’s social context.
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45

I.A., Francis, and Elizabeth U. "Optimality Theoretical Approach in Resolving Vocalic Hiatus in Tiv Language." International Journal of Literature, Language and Linguistics 4, no. 1 (September 22, 2021): 89–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.52589/ijlll-v5nyl142.

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This paper investigates vocalic hiatus resolution strategies in Tiv language. Hiatus is a phonological phenomenon whereby two vowel sounds occur in adjacent syllables with no intervening consonant. It is a dispreferred configuration in many languages but when it inevitably occurs, it is resolved through some of these strategies: epenthesis, vowel assimilation, vowel elision, secondary articulation, vowel coalescence, glide formation and diphthongization. Though there are other hiatus resolution strategies in Tiv, for want of time and space, this paper examines the most common ones: vowel assimilation and vowel elision, as hiatus resolution/repair strategies in Tiv, through the lenses of the Optimality Theory. It adopts a descriptive and analytical research design. The intuitive phonological ability of the researcher and oral interview through purposive sampling were used for eliciting data. Data were presented and analysed in tables. The study establishes the occurrence of vowel hiatus in Tiv. It demonstrates that vocalic hiatus is dispreferred in Tiv as it is in many other languages of the world. The study has shown that Tiv utilises inter-alia vowel assimilation and vowel elision to resolve vowel hiatus. The resolution is meant to ease articulation of Tiv words. Well-formedness of vowel configurations in Tiv was found to be constraint based in which case optimality of a candidate that undergoes repairs through either vowel assimilation or elision is determined by the ranking of the universal constraints that interact in the selection of candidates.
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46

Jaskuła, Krzysztof. "Uwagi o elizji spółgłosek wargowych we współczesnej polszczyźnie mediów." LingVaria 13, no. 25 (May 30, 2018): 65–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.12797/lv.13.2017.25.05.

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Remarks on the Elision of Labial Consonants in Contemporary Polish MediaIntervocalic elision of labial consonants seems to be one of the most common types of distorting the pronunciation of contemporary Polish words in colloquial speech. This phenomenon was described by Biedrzycki (1978) as typical of everyday speech and unknown to media or in official situations. Now it has entered the world of electronic media on a large scale and has become something of a norm among television presenters as well as experts and actors. All of these speakers tend to employ articulatorily incorrect Polish in official situations. This paper includes a preliminary classification of contexts where the deletion of labials takes place, and as such it is a continuation of Jaskuła (2014). Moreover, an attempt has been made to determine the reasons for elision. Analyses of similar phenomena which can be found in the phonological literature concerning both Polish and other phonological systems have also been taken into account with a view to discovering whether or not there is an interplay between phonetics and phonology in this respect.
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47

Bormann, Karsten. "Occlusion Culling in Large Virtual Environments." Presence: Teleoperators and Virtual Environments 10, no. 5 (October 2001): 477–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/105474601753132669.

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In this paper, occlusion testing in very large virtual environments is discussed from two perspectives: a theoretical one, discussing occlusion culling in relation to detail elision (level of detail), and a practical one, relating to an adaptive occlusion-culling algorithm developed in this paper. The theoretical perspective formally demonstrates the efficiency of detail elision in the face of real-world-like environments. It further shows the utility of using detail elision not only to lower the triangle count of individual objects but also to lower the load on the scene graph traversal algorithm. Finally, the results indicate that, even in open environments, one needs occlusion culling and that approaches based on choosing only a few good (convex) occluders are insufficient in this case. Practically, the theoretical perspective is reflected in the development of an occlusion-culling algorithm based on a marriage of the frustum-slicing approach to view frustum culling and hierarchical occlusion maps (HOMs). The resulting algorithm is much simpler than the original HOM algorithm, requires little pre-processing, and integrates detail elision with the occlusion-culling algorithm in a natural way. The approach is well suited for use with large, complex models with a long mean free line of sight (“the great outdoors”), models for which it is not feasible to construct, or search, a database of occluders to be rendered in each frame. The algorithm is tested for such large models, and results show that frame rates tend to converge as the geometrical complexity of the model increases.
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48

Casali, Roderic F. "Vowel Elision in Hiatus Contexts: Which Vowel Goes?" Language 73, no. 3 (September 1997): 493. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/415882.

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49

Kleen, Andi. "Scaling existing lock-based applications with lock elision." Communications of the ACM 57, no. 3 (March 2014): 52–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2576793.

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50

Kleen, Andi. "Scaling Existing Lock-based Applications with Lock Elision." Queue 12, no. 1 (January 2014): 20–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2576966.2579227.

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