| 41. | The digraph } } may be pronounced in some words ( before front vowels and before back ones ).
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| 42. | This is one reason they are written to the right of unrounded front vowels in the IPA vowel chart.
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| 43. | The pronunciation of varies depending on context; it is labial before back vowels and labiodental before front vowels.
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| 44. | However, the front vowel stems distinguish rounded vs . unroundedness based on the last vowel in the stem.
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| 45. | The / e / is realized as a low to mid-front vowel, usually between or high.
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| 46. | The evidence for the allophone after front vowels is indirect, as it is not indicated in the orthography.
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| 47. | A soft pronunciation before non-front vowels is usually indicated by a silent or ( e . g.
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| 48. | In the examples below, represents, =, and is spelled before back vowels and before front vowels.
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| 49. | Examples are Bulgarian has an open-mid, even though neither language has another phonemic mid front vowel.
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| 50. | The difference between bilabial consonants with and without a labio-velar release is relevant only before front vowels.
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