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  1. The voiced palatal fricative is a very rare sound, occurring in only 7 of the 317 languages surveyed by the original UCLA Phonological Segment Inventory Database. In Dutch , Kabyle , Margi , Modern Greek , and Scottish Gaelic , the sound occurs phonemically, along with its voiceless counterpart , and in several more, the sound occurs as a ...

  2. The UCLA Phonological Segment Inventory Database (or UPSID) is a statistical survey of the phoneme inventories in 451 of the world's languages. The database was created by American phonetician Ian Maddieson for the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) in 1984 and has been updated several times. Bibliography. Maddieson, Ian. (1984).

  3. Mar 1, 2009 · UPSID—the UCLA phonological segment inventory database—is a database containing the phoneme inventories of a large genetically based sample of languages [I. Maddieson, Patterns of Sounds (1984)].

  4. Jun 30, 2014 · Database of Eurasian phonological inventories. number of records: 416 languages; type of sample: interface: web and offline (json) data: segment inventory, suprasegmentals, language (name, family, group) searchable: segment inventory, language, location; search display: map, list, segments table; Indo-European Phonological Inventory Database ...

  5. Nov 24, 2023 · From this, we extracted UPSID, the UCLA Phonological Segment Inventory Database (Maddieson 1984, expanded by Maddieson and Precoda 1990), which is a widely cited phoneme collection of 450 inventories and was a constituent part of the first version of PHOIBLE (see Moran 2012 for details). We also extracted a fourth global dataset from PHOIBLE ...

  6. in turn provided the database required to test for phonological universals. Specifically, such phonological investigations allowed Maddieson (1984, 1991) and Maddieson and Precoda (1990) to establish the UCLA Phonological Segment Inventory Database (UPSID), the most widely used database for typological and universal research in phonology.

  7. Jun 16, 2014 · Patterns of Sounds describes the frequency and distributional patterns of the phonemic sounds in a large and representative sample of the world's languages. The results are based on UPSID (the UCLA Phonological Segment Inventory Database), a computer file containing the phonemes of 317 languages selected on the basis of genetic diversity.