guttural Meaning in Tamil ( guttural வார்த்தையின் தமிழ் அர்த்தம்)
Adjective:
தொண்டையில் ஒலிக்கின்ற, தொண்டையில் இருந்து வருகிற ஒலி,
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guttural's Usage Examples:
In the second period the gutturals have been palatalized, but there yet is no change of final s to r.
th in thing), had down till about the middle of the 16th century the voiceless sound Is and the voiced sounddz respectively, and that in like manner tbe palatal spirants g, j, x, before assuming the uniform pronunciation of the guttural spirant (-Germ.
In other dialects of Italy b is found representing an original voiced guttural (gw), which, however, is regularly replaced by v in Latin.
73) distinguished the Galileans; it appears that they confused the gutturals in pronunciation.
Ch is always to be sounded as in church, g is always hard; y always represents a consonant; whilst kh and gh stand for gutturals.
The pronunciation of C throughout the period of classical Latin was that of an unvoiced guttural stop (k).
Hinduism has also impressed its language upon the province, and the vernacular Assamese possesses a close affinity to Bengali, with the substitution of s for the Bengali ch, of a guttural h for the Bengali h or sh, and a few other dialectic changes.
If this last identification be correct it would show that in Messapian (just as in Venetic and Ligurian) the original velars were retained as gutturals and not converted into labials.
The sign x was kept in the western group for the guttural spirant in E, which was written X*; but, as this spirant occurred nowhere else, the combination was often abbreviated, and X was used for X precisely as in the Italic alphabets we shall find that F f develops out of a combination FH.
The study of the spirants, c, 1, 1; g, j is made a very delicate one by the circumstance that the interdental pronunciation of c, 1 on the one hand, and the guttural pronunciation of g, j on the other, are of comparatively recent date, and convey no notion of the value of these letters before the 17th century.
It is very soft and musical, full of vowels and liquids, and free from all harsh gutturals.
Synonyms:
croaky, cacophonic, cacophonous,
Antonyms:
quiet, inharmonious, inconsistent, euphonious,