释义 |
syllabic
syl·lab·ic S0954700 (sĭ-lăb′ĭk)adj.1. a. Of, relating to, or consisting of a syllable or syllables.b. Pronounced with every syllable distinct.2. Linguistics Designating a sound that is or can be the most sonorant segment of a syllable, as a vowel or a resonant. In the word riddle (rĭd′l), the two syllabic sounds are the (ĭ) and the (l).3. Of or being a form of verse based on the number of syllables in a line rather than on the arrangement of accents or quantities.n. Linguistics A syllabic sound. [Medieval Latin syllabicus, from Greek sullabikos, from sullabē, syllable; see syllable.] syl·lab′i·cal·ly adv.syllabic (sɪˈlæbɪk) adj1. (Linguistics) of or relating to syllables or the division of a word into syllables2. (Poetry) denoting a kind of verse line based on a specific number of syllables rather than being regulated by stresses or quantities3. (Linguistics) (of a consonant) constituting a syllable4. (Music, other) (of plainsong and similar chanting) having each syllable sung to a different noten (Linguistics) a syllabic consonant sylˈlabically advsyl•lab•ic (sɪˈlæb ɪk) adj. 1. of, pertaining to, or consisting of a syllable or syllables. 2. based on or pertaining to a specific number of syllables, as opposed to vowel length or number of stresses: syllabic verse. 3. a. (of a consonant) forming a syllable by itself, as the (n) in button (ˈbʌt n) or the (l) in bottle (ˈbɒt l) b. (of a vowel) dominating the other sounds in a syllable; sonantal. 4. pronounced with careful distinction of syllables. n. 5. a syllabic sound or character. [1720–30; < Late Latin syllabicus < Greek syllabikós] syl•lab′i•cal•ly, adv. ThesaurusAdj. | 1. | syllabic - of or relating to syllables; "syllabic accent"; "syllabic characters each represent a syllable" | | 2. | syllabic - consisting of or using a syllabary; "eskimos of the eastern Arctic have a system of syllabic writing" | | 3. | syllabic - (of verse) having lines based on number of syllables rather than on rhythmical arrangement of stresses or quantitiesaccentual - (of verse) having a metric system based on stress rather than syllables or quantity; "accentual poetry is based on the number of stresses in a line"; "accentual rhythm"quantitative - (of verse) having a metric system based on relative duration of syllables; "in typical Greek and Latin verse of the classical period the rhymic system is based on some arrangement of long and short elements" | | 4. | syllabic - consisting of a syllable or syllablesnonsyllabic, unsyllabic - not forming a syllable or the nucleus of a syllable; consisting of a consonant sound accompanied in the same syllable by a vowel sound or consisting of a vowel sound dominated by other vowel sounds in a syllable (as the second vowel in a falling diphthong); "the nonsyllabic `n' in `botany' when it is pronounced `botny'"; "the nonsyllabic `i' in `oi'" | | 5. | syllabic - (of speech sounds) forming the nucleus of a syllable; "the syllabic 'nl' in 'riddle'"nonsyllabic - (of speech sounds) not forming or capable of forming the nucleus of a syllable; "initial 'l' in 'little' is nonsyllabic" | Translationssyllable (ˈsiləbl) noun a word or part of a word usually containing a vowel sound. `Cheese' has one syllable, `but-ter' two and `mar-ga-rine' three. 音節 音节syllabic (-ˈlӕ-) adjective 音節的 音节的syllabic
syllabic1. denoting a kind of verse line based on a specific number of syllables rather than being regulated by stresses or quantities 2. (of plainsong and similar chanting) having each syllable sung to a different note syllabic
Antonyms for syllabicadj (of verse) having lines based on number of syllables rather than on rhythmical arrangement of stresses or quantitiesAntonymsadj consisting of a syllable or syllablesAntonymsadj (of speech sounds) forming the nucleus of a syllableAntonyms |