Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"phonetic" Definitions
  1. using special symbols to represent each different speech sound
  2. (of a spelling or spelling system) that closely matches the sounds represented
  3. connected with the sounds of human speech

152 Sentences With "phonetic"

How to use phonetic in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "phonetic" and check conjugation/comparative form for "phonetic". Mastering all the usages of "phonetic" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Opt to add field from the list of options and you can then add fields for phonetic first name, phonetic middle name and phonetic last name.
Tap the Add Field option and on the next screen, select Phonetic First Name or Phonetic Last Name.
Because what is uniformity but boredom in a phonetic disguise?
She recorded her first album in Spanish through phonetic sound.
We hopefully have Zolgensma and Ticray [phonetic], another drug in cancer.
" If you want to phonetic about it, it's pronounced "dzah-dah.
The device referred to here is semiotic — the NATO PHONETIC ALPHABET.
For Linear B, phonetic charts painstakingly eventually led to that language's decipherment.
"But some of those syllables are phonetic and others aren't," you plead.
FETE, the phonetic spelling of "feat," and the phrase is "night feat,"
But without a phonetic system to guide pronunciation, it is famously difficult.
Some people hate phonetic spelling in prose, but I'm fine with it.
And I had to edit that language, which is not really phonetic.
To the reader, each character conveys mainly semantic, rather than phonetic, information.
Listeners either heard "Yanny" or "Laurel," two words with seemingly little phonetic similarity.
Finally, the circles in the grid make an anagram of the word PHONETIC.
Let's hear from Mr. Kahn who, thankfully, is not spelling out his notes: This theme works because the eight letters in PHONETIC are all different and the eight code words spelling out PHONETIC can be placed symmetrically in the grid.
Hacking through the first part of this sentence is a grammatical and phonetic trial.
Several are signed "PGo," a phonetic initialism that recalls sailors' slang for a penis.
Hence, Laurie's Doctor Manhattan sex toy is a phonetic match: Ex-Cal-Abar. Sneaky!
They were not literary books, because they did not use phonetic or alphabetic systems.
Phonetic radicals give clues about a character's pronunciation; semantic ones give clues about its meaning.
"Is my five-letter, perfectly phonetic name too difficult for you," Ms. Balkar recalled thinking.
Also called phonetic alphabets, they replaced letters with words that started with the corresponding letter.
Half of this detail makes logical sense, since "Whiskey" is "W" in the military phonetic alphabet.
Yes, Myq Kaplan goes by a funny phonetic spelling of his first name for comedic purposes.
I reflected that using homophones for letters instead might allow for better themers, and then eventually realized I had inadvertently found the perfect way to tie my theme together — by replacing words of a "phonetic" alphabet of sorts with the letters of an actual phonetic alphabet!
Instead, it said the word was the "phonetic equivalent" of the past tense of a vulgar word.
I thought there must be some special phonetic quality to it and wrote my song around it.
To defend her declaration, she included a spectrogram, a visual chart showing the phonetic pronunciation of words.
It will then show the word's spelling and speak the phonetic pronunciation of the identified vocabulary words.
I predict that solvers will spend more time thinking about the phonetic spelling than on the clues.
" And he heard the mostly white Buttigieg crowd chant the campaign's phonetic rallying cry — "BOOT EDGE EDGE!
There's no phonetic difference between a k and a kk, or between an -a and an -ah.
Lucid, a name that could be a phonetic play on Tesla's Ludicrous mode, has it roots in batteries.
So if ancient Chinese manuscripts had been written with phonetic symbols, they'd become harder to decipher over time.
The entry must not contain or be phonetic similar to any third party product names, brand names or trademarks.
Mr. Polin was able to make his phonetic hints cross the long Across theme entries, a particularly nice touch.
The phonetic breakdown of "You-are-hiding-a-child" feels like a burning reality check from a family elder.
Correction: This article was updated to correct the phonetic spelling of the company to Zoh-tay, instead of Zoh-tee.
Instead, it said the word was the "phonetic equivalent" of the past tense of what sounds like a vulgar term.
The office said the word was the "phonetic equivalent" of the past tense of what sounds like a vulgar term.
And the success of the phonetic trick varies wildly by language, depending on how closely related it is to English.
His second entrepreneurial effort, Phonetic Arts, was another speech startup, aimed at tech that could be used in gaming interactions.
The campaign has made a virtue of the confusion, printing its go-to phonetic aide-mémoire — BOOT-edge-edge — on T-shirts.
Examples given by the ministries included the phonetic renderings in Chinese of foreign names as well as Chinese names using Roman letters.
On the page, Gozo's language switches from journalistic prose to heightened speech to phonetic combinations, which appear to have no semantic content.
"A lot of these patterns are on the phonetic level, meaning that it deals with sounds," associate English professor Mary Kohn said.
Some, but not all, characters have a phonetic clue to how they should be pronounced, each regional language pronouncing a character differently.
For example, if Siri trips over the Irish name Siobhan, enter "she vann" into the Phonetic First Name field and tap Done.
Alfonso and his savants forged Spanish into an exceptionally well-organized language with phonetic standards, making it relatively accessible for some learners.
EC: For me, it is a form of visual language that I mix to make visual sentences, which are not necessarily phonetic.
The show's phonetic title seems to capture the vulva just before it solidifies into a signifier, renewing its possibilities of meaning production.
These characters are made up of graphic symbols called radicals, which often are combined with phonetic or semantic components to form compound characters.
Google will then show you the word, plus a phonetic spelling, in search results along with the option to listen to its pronunciation.
They found variants across 31 languages whose phonetic patterns otherwise varied greatly, suggesting that "Huh?" was a rare example of a universal word.
Mr. Kounellis had been exhibiting canvases with stenciled letters and numerals — work he called "phonetic poems" — but quickly showed signs of artistic restlessness.
To help set up aspiring spellers for success, here's a list of the most challenging words to spell, complete with phonetic pronunciations and definitions.
Recognizing the character as "yi" from a phonetic standpoint is one thing, but knowing that it means the number "one" in English is another.
In contrast, older methods specified which type of linguistic and phonetic features of speech were thought important in order to compare them between speakers.
"Yeah, hi, its Husky Eight-Niner Hotel Uniform," Ford is heard saying on the recording, using the phonetic pronunciation of his aviation call sign.
"Chinese people are now approaching language more as a phonetic phenomenon than as a graphic one," says Victor Mair of the University of Pennsylvania.
If they don't, the answers to the starred clues are all letters in the PHONETIC alphabet, as used by the military and by NATO.
Her spelling, often phonetic, of proper names is less reliable, but is retained, and the correct version given in a square bracket or footnote.
The clue says "Compromise … or a phonetic hint to this puzzle's shaded squares," which is our clue to find the homophone in the clue.
"I think that it doesn't seem to be hurting Pete 'Boot-edge-edge,'" Trump continued, using a phonetic pronunciation of former South Bend, Ind.
The revealer at 38A, clued as "Big scare of a couple of decades ago … or a phonetic hint to this puzzle's theme," is Y2K.
Other linguists say the language was just as precise as any non-phonetic language we use today, like traffic signs or signs in airports.
The title of the show, á ùne éa, is set of phonetic sounds that suggest sense and nonsense without becoming one or the other.
I can just take the phonetic sequence that sounds like "weather" and attach that to a program that calls up the temperature of the geological.
She then went on to list other potential phonetic theme revealers like excellency and escapee (a theme recently done by C.C. Burnikel elsewhere) and DEVIOUS.
This was not supposed to be, as some in Seoul grumble, the "Pyongyang Games," a play on the North Korean capital's phonetic similarity to Pyeongchang.
In his book "Moonwalking With Einstein," the author Joshua Foer described this system as a simple cipher that transforms numbers to letters or phonetic sounds.
The phonetic title of Cristina Camacho's /ˈvʌlvə/ seems to capture the vulva just before it solidifies into a signifier, renewing its possibilities of meaning production.
Just two days after Dwyane Wade revealed their baby girl's unique moniker — Kaavia James Union Wade — the actress, 46, shared her own crystal clear phonetic guide.
Slurring words, mashing up syllables into phonetic salad, he moans and gargles his way over a confluence of folk guitar, jangle guitar, and generic indie noises.
If you'd like to explore more about punctuation, you might enjoy this video clip of the comedian Victor Borge featuring his famous routine about phonetic punctuation.
Also, it might be helpful to know that this is a phonetic theme, and the spelling of the final answers will change from their base phrases.
"I chose the phonetic spelling because it alludes to that space between and can be read as both 'sucker' and 'succor,'" Rodríguez told The Oberlin Review.
I also had originally clued NATO and PHONETIC ALPHABET separately to explain what is replacing/replaced in the theme answers, but the new clue simplifies things.
The trademark office said the brand would be perceived as the phonetic equivalent of the profanity, observing that Brunetti's products contained sexual imagery, misogyny and violence.
That's not to judge "Whiskey Tango Foxtrot" (the title is a play on a common profane phrase using the military phonetic alphabet) by its star's previous successes.
If the first letter of a reporting name is an "F," or "FOXTROT" as pronounced in the military phonetic alphabet, this designates the aircraft as a fighter.
Linguistics has mostly taken Hermogenes' side, but, in the past eighty years, a field of research called phonetic symbolism has shown that Cratylus was on to something.
The lyrics for "I Zimbra" were derived from "Gadji beri bimba," a 1916 phonetic poem by Hugo Ball, the German author-poet and co-founder of Dada.
It can't read text straight out just yet; written words need to be translated by another system not to audio but audio precursors — like computer-readable phonetic spelling.
To communicate with non-telepathic beings, they connect the orb to a tube which runs into their mouth, so that their thoughts can be converted into phonetic language.
The "Zao" app, which is the phonetic sound of the Chinese character "to create," was developed by a unit that's majority-owned by online social networking platform Momo.
"Giraffe, girafe, giraffa (English, French, Italian) — all derive from the Arabic zerafa, a phonetic variant of zarafa, which means 'charming' or 'lovely one,'" Allin explains in the book.
Others worried that the new policy might harm firms with foreign-sounding names, or result in clumsy efforts to translate Western names into Chinese rather than using phonetic approximations.
Scholars say that the phonetic diversity of Xibe, a language thought to be related to Turkish, Mongolian and Korean, allows speakers to easily produce the sounds of other tongues.
The names in Chinese are generally the closest phonetic representation of the English words, sometimes with the English below for show (a floral, cursive or Gothic script is preferred).
In recent years, French courts have rejected such names as Nutella, Prince-William, and, for a pair of twins, Joyeux (Happy) and Patriste (a phonetic take on Not Sad).
Shortly after finishing a linguistics Ph.D. at Berkeley in 1980, Ken Whistler was frustrated by the inability of mainframe computers to print the specialized phonetic symbols that linguists use.
Computers and smartphones are impossible to use if you're restricted to Chinese characters; it's only with phonetic systems of writing, like Bopomofo and Pinyin, that text entry becomes practical.
There were still dozens of bright yellow lawn signs, a big drawing of the phonetic pronunciation of "Kamala" and information about how to receive text messages from the campaign.
Basing its decision on Google search results and entries in Urban Dictionary, the board rejected Mr. Brunetti's application, calling his brand name a "phonetic twin" of the curse word.
I got the second part at the very end — I got NATO at 114A, but had PHONE to start the next entry and didn't think of PHONETIC at all.
Here, testimonies from lawyers, phonetic experts, asylum seekers and Home Office officials reveal the geopolitics of accents and the practices of listening that led to shocking stories of wrongful deportations.
These PHONETIC code words not only contain the letter or letters they designate but, as Mr. Kahn notes below, all eight code words can be placed symmetrically in the grid.
According to linguist Robert Daland, an assistant professor with UCLA's Department of Linguistics, there is a perfectly good reason why no one can figure out this phonetic freak of nature.
I think back to the years I spent hopelessly dreaming through my confused shame, and I'm heartened (phonetic pun intended) to think of the experience I now have at my fingertips. ●
China's highest court said Qiaodan Sports Co. can continue to use the English-language phonetic spelling of Jordan's Chinese name, as this was not closely linked to the former basketball star.
His application was initially approved, but an official then deemed the mark unacceptable because "FUCT is the phonetic equivalent of the word 'fucked', the past-tense form of the verb 'fuck'".
The ease of reading classical Chinese has been significantly overstated, but, to the extent that ancient texts remain understandable, I suspect it's due to the fact that Chinese characters aren't phonetic.
For example, many writers (especially on the East Coast) still use the Wades-Giles spelling of Chinese locations, a phonetic system that was invented by British diplomats Herbert Giles and Thomas Wade.
"It's easy to live an intensely Muslim life here," said Ma Habibu, 67, a retired truck driver, whose surname, Ma, with its phonetic resemblance to the name Mohammed, is common among the Hui.
T.F. stands for "training facility" (though very little official training takes place here), and Thompson's comes out of a phonetic misunderstanding that comes from knowing a place verbally, rather than on a map.
The phrases consist of two words, the first word starting with the letter A and the second starting with the letter T. The revealer, THE EIGHTIES, is a phonetic hint to the phrases.
Italian, Russian or Chinese—to name a few of the estimated 7,000 languages in the world—are natural, breathing languages which rely as much on social convention as on syntactic, phonetic or semantic rules.
Last year Jackie Chan, a Hong Kong film star, famously launched a phonetic firestorm in mainland China with an advert for shampoo where he flicked his bouffy hair and exclaimed how "duang" it was.
"The respondent testified that he was reluctant to open up about his sexual orientation, but he did open up to an individual named Francisco [phonetic] in the spring of 22004," the written opinion states.
Linguists, who had recommended that the new writing system follow the example of Turkish, which uses umlauts and other phonetic markers instead of apostrophes, protested that the president's approach would be ugly and imprecise.
The show's title plays with the phonetic pronunciation of GUIs — Graphic User Interfaces, or "gooeys" — and alludes to an essay by the same name that Artist recently published in the arts and politics journal Unbag.
"We Are Grateful: Otsaliheliga" by Traci Sorell available at Amazon for $13.69 and Barnes & Noble for $16.42This is a very loaded book that features Cherokee vocabulary words, including their phonetic pronunciations, symbols, and English translations.
"The phonetic value of letters, their functional role, is so securely lodged in our mind that it takes a conscious effort to see a word, rather than to 'hear' it," Rotem writes in an essay.
Everything slipped through one ear and out the other, but I could imagine myself learning the language by pausing at every scene, repeating each phonetic sound I heard and hoping that it strung together a sentence.
In one instance, I saw a guy post the the phonetic elements of a song he was trying to name—essentially random sounds he was humming—and voila, the song was identified a mere hour later.
When the FUCT trademark application, filed in 2011, was denied, the trademark office said the brand would be perceived as the phonetic equivalent of the profanity, observing that Brunetti's products contained sexual imagery, misogyny and violence.
The shots of forests, mountains, and highways are sung over with stories from powwows by Hopinka's father — who, like the artist, is a member of the Ho-Chunk Nation — and transcribed, on screen, in phonetic lettering.
"Ian Maddieson, a linguist at the University of New Mexico, said "this paper is a welcome addition to the discussion of the extent to which language-external factors impinge on the phonetic design of human languages.
The epigraph to Kelley's third novel, " dem ," is written in the International Phonetic Alphabet—written, that is, to capture the way people actually speak, even though, in doing so, it thwarts the way people usually read.
A brain, he said, sacrifices suppleness to gain stability as it matures; once you master your mother tongue, you don't need the phonetic plasticity of childhood, and a typical brain puts that circuitry to another use.
It's especially inefficient when reciting web addresses, and then there's the lack of any phonetic clue when pronouncing the letter – who would know that a double U would begin any words, such as the word "word"?
He already received accolades for his performance in 1992's "The Mambo Kings," a performance so openhearted and passionate that few noticed that his only English at the time was in the form of phonetic imitation.
The clue for the revealer is "Baseball rarities nowadays ... or a phonetic hint to the starts of 17-, 26-, 48- and 57-Across," so the beginnings (or "headers") of each theme entry are supposed to DOUBLE.
In 1928, brothers Allan and Malcolm Loughead, the founders of the Loughead Aircraft Manufacturing Company, which would evolve into the Lockheed Aircraft Company, established a Lockheed plant in Burbank (utilizing the phonetic spelling of their name).
"I think that, yes, I think that it doesn't seem to be hurting Pete Boot-edge-edge as you say, as you would call him," he argued, using the phonetic pronunciation that Buttigieg's campaign has deployed.
The office refused Brunetti's request because it said FUCT was the "phonetic equivalent" of the past tense of a vulgar word, and determined that federal law prohibits the registration of trademarks that consist of "scandalous" subject matter.
Los Angeles producers Morris and So Drove (formerly known as Schwarz) just shared a new song with a clever title—"Say Yes," So Drove explained is a "phonetic palindrome" that can be pronounced both backward and forward.
Over Donald Trump's first three weeks in the Oval Office, it's become clear that his White House and agencies are adopting their boss' ambivalence toward elitist orthography and embracing a more phonetic approach to the written word.
If your Contacts list contains names with unusual spellings and pronunciations that Siri cannot accurately match up when you ask for them, you can try adding a phonetic version of the name to the person's contact card.
Vulgar question: The U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear an appeal by a clothing line whose brand name, "Fuct," was rejected by the trademark office as the "phonetic twin" of the most versatile Anglo-Saxon curse word.
Instead, he embraced a discovery by the Soviet scholar Yuri Knorozov, who deciphered phonetic syllables in the Maya writing system, which allowed the texts to be read and spoken in their original language as well as translated.
But by the same token, such a system carries a great disadvantage: Because the characters disclose little phonetic information, it is not possible, without prior knowledge, to look at a Chinese word and know how to pronounce it.
See some of Kylie's other ink below, including a mysterious pinkie tattoo created by Jon Boy (he also famously inked Kendall), the phonetic pronunciation of "sanity," a tiny red heart, and — sweetest of all — script of her grandmother's name.
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Argentine soccer player Lionel Messi may register his name as a trademark for sports equipment and clothing, the EU's second highest court said, as he was famous enough to overcome phonetic similarities with Spanish bicycle clothing brand Massi.
Years later, the phonetic pronunciations displayed on President George W. Bush's teleprompter for locations like Kyrgyzstan "(KEYR-geez-stan)" was accidentally published on the United Nations website after an address, playing into criticisms that Bush was naive about foreign affairs.
The crowdsourcing element will entail wiki users either being able to report badly sounding sentences, or to correct the sentences themselves — although that will require some linguistic knowledge as it will involve using a phonetic transcription to correct the dictionary.
"In the first stage it the will have to use phonetic transcription (IPA) to correct the dictionary, but we will explore the possibility for a user to record how it should be pronounced and that automatically correct the transcription," he notes.
A list of phonetic spellings for words that might be challenging to pronounce is provided, but while he read a book about Lincoln's war secretary Edwin Stanton, who was a lawyer in Pittsburgh, the Monongahela River required a few tries.
"Need a pronouncer on the village name," I wrote, referring to an age-old New York Times convention of putting, in parenthesis, a phonetic guide to how one should say a complicated name, complete with capital letters for which syllable to stress.
The only reason publicly cited by Mr. Nazarbayev to explain why he did not want Turkish-style phonetic markers is that "there should not be any hooks or superfluous dots that cannot be put straight into a computer," he said in September.
A sweeping retrospective at the Centre Pompidou, built around an archival treasure trove recently acquired by the museum, presents an opulent and conceptually challenging body of Isou's paintings, films, objects, sounds, drawings, and writings, which encompass all means of lexical and phonetic notation.
In one of the emails, apparently written in relation to Upper East Side synagogue Congregation Kehilath Jeshurun, de Blasio wrote: This is literally the 100th time I am reminding you all that phonetic spellings require one syllable to be capitalized to indicate emphasis in pronunciation.
"The first finished works were the gematria charts, listing 92 psychoactive plants alongside their botanical names translated into phonetic Hebrew, using gematria to derive their numerical equivalents, and next to these results the numerically corresponding companies in the FT Global 500 Index," explains Treister.
I rarely give the revealer right away, but the hint at 65A, "'Star Wars' droid ... or a phonetic hint to what's found in 17-, 26-, 41- and 1003-Across" for ARTOO DETOO comes as we heard of the actor Kenny Baker's death on August 13.
"The dissimilarity between the signs at issue, resulting from the presence of the additional letter 'm' at the beginning of "Mi Pad", is not sufficient to offset the high degree of visual and phonetic similarity between the two signs," the Court said in a statement.
Take away all of Mr. Seidenberg's helpful tables, charts and other scientific furniture, and his conclusion boils down to this: Human beings learn written language most efficiently in the same way that humanity first learned it, by following the pathway from phonetic speech toward reading.
"Due to the inherent unstable articulatory nature of belching, it is unclear as to whether these criteria present a defensive set of acoustic criteria, but it is the first significant step taken in half a century to provide phonetic/ acoustic representation of belching," she said.
Through a series of experiments intended to peel back the psychological layers around this phenomenon, Thibodeau found evidence to support a new theory that "moist" is hated not for its phonetic properties, but for its semantic corollaries that make us think of bodily fluids, or effluvia.
As someone with a name that ends in a long "e" sound, or a phonetic "ee," I always thought anecdotally that of the hundreds of women who have competed on the show, the majority share this common stressed vowel, which turned out to be not the case.

No results under this filter, show 152 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.