| 21. | Some speakers with more dramatic glottalization have a glottal stop closure in the middle of the vowel ( i . e . as ).
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| 22. | According to Wells, this pre-glottalization originated in the 20th century ( at least, it was not recorded until then ).
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| 23. | In Danish ( except for some southern dialects ), the pitch accent of Swedish and Norwegian corresponds to the glottalization phenomenon known as st�d.
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| 24. | In many British English dialects, a different lenition that affects only [ t ] takes place : > ( see T-glottalization ).
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| 25. | It is denoted variously with a superscript glottalization symbol ?, a glottal stop symbol ?, or simply as the laryngeal cover symbol H.
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| 26. | The R represents a sonorant, the S a fricative, the T a stop or affricate, and the a glottalization of the preceding segment.
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| 27. | Glottalization can only occur on vowels or sonorants and only in one or two-syllable words and is realized in transcription as a ['].
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| 28. | "T "-glottalization is believed to have been spreading in Southern England at a faster rate than " th "-fronting.
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| 29. | Recent studies ( Milroy, Milroy & Walshaw 1994, Fabricius 2000 ) have suggested that " t "-glottalization is increasing in RP speech.
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| 30. | It likely involved glottalization at some stage, as a similar articulatory feature is found in the Latvian " broken tone ", which is a reflex of it.
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