U, etc., so that it would appear as if in simple sounds, that each vowel was inseparable from a peculiar pitch, and that in the compound system of pulses, although its pitch be lost, its vowel quality is strengthened." . . . "Having shown the probability... The Theory of Sound - الصفحة 471بواسطة John William Strutt Baron Rayleigh - 1896عرض كامل - لمحة عن هذا الكتاب
| Yale University. Psychological laboratory - 1893 - عدد الصفحات: 1008
...system of pulses, although its pitch be lost, its vowel quality is strengthened." . . . "Having shown the probability that a given vowel is merely the rapid...repetition in any other way, we may expect to hear vowels. ROHIXSON and others had shown that a quill held against a toothed wheel, would produce a musical note... | |
| Yale University Psychology Laboratory - 1899 - عدد الصفحات: 538
...system of pulses, although its pitch be lost, its vowel quality is strengthened." . . . "Having shown the probability that a given vowel is merely the rapid...repetition in any other way, we may expect to hear vowels. ROBINSON and others had shown that a quill held against a toothed wheel, would produce a musical note... | |
| Edward Wheeler Scripture - 1902 - عدد الصفحات: 742
...system of pulses, although its pitch be lost, its vowel quality is strengthened. . . • Having shown the probability that a given vowel is merely the rapid...repetition in any other way, we may expect to hear vowels. ROBINSON and others had shown that a quill held against a toothed wheel would produce a musical note... | |
| John William Strutt Baron Rayleigh, Robert Bruce Lindsay - 1945 - عدد الصفحات: 530
...far as general principles are concerned, he left little to be effected by his successors. 8omewhat later in the same memoir (p. 249) he gives an account...vowels. Robison and others had shewn that a quill held against'a revolving toothed wheel, would produce a musical note by the rapid equidistant repetition... | |
| Peter Ladefoged - 1996 - عدد الصفحات: 230
...frequency each but by a combination of frequencies; if we alter his remark slightly, however, and say that a given vowel is merely the rapid repetition of its peculiar chord, we have a statement that fits the data of figure 7.5 very nicely. The description of the production... | |
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