Diphones: Difference between revisions
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A diphone | A diphone refers to two adjacent [[phone]]s | ||
Usually refers to the transition between the two phones in pronunication, especially when this is distict from their isolated pronunciations. | Usually refers to the transition between the two phones in pronunication, especially when this is distict from their isolated pronunciations. | ||
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Diphones are common in vocal modelling for [[speech recongition]] and [[speech synthesis]]. | Diphones are common in vocal modelling for [[speech recongition]] and [[speech synthesis]]. | ||
Not to be confused with [[dipthong]], which one vowel sliding into another (a dipthong can be considered a diphone of two vowels{{verify}}) | |||
[[category:phonetics]] | [[category:phonetics]] |
Revision as of 15:54, 16 October 2023
✎ This article/section is a stub — some half-sorted notes, not necessarily checked, not necessarily correct. Feel free to ignore, or tell me about it.
A diphone refers to two adjacent phones
Usually refers to the transition between the two phones in pronunication, especially when this is distict from their isolated pronunciations.
Diphones are common in vocal modelling for speech recongition and speech synthesis.
Not to be confused with dipthong, which one vowel sliding into another (a dipthong can be considered a diphone of two vowels(verify))