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  1. External links. Simple interface to UPSID, including the list of languages and searches by selected criteria. Info on obtaining UPSID information from UCLA.

  2. phoible.org › contributors › UPSIDPHOIBLE 2.0

    The UPSID-451 data used in PHOIBLE Online were extracted from a DOS software package. Each segment description, originally given in an ASCII encoding (e.g. XW9:) was mapped to Unicode IPA and each inventory was assigned an ISO 639-3 language name identifier. For details, see Moran 2012, chp 4; the UPSID-to-Unicode mappings are given in Moran ...

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  4. UPSID (UCLA Phonological Segment Inventory Database) K-ToBI (Korean Tones & Break Indices) CELEX; Phonation database (languages with contrastive phonation) physiology resources in the lab; online digitized Xray and other films from our collection

  5. The UCLA Phonological Segment Inventory Database. Data on the phonological systems of 451 languages, with programs to access it, by Ian Maddieson and Kristin Precoda. This is an elderly DOS program (and thus Windows only), neither of whose developers are still at UCLA, and no support is offered.

  6. Inventory Language # segments # vowels # consonants # tones Contributor Cite PHOIBLE 2.0 edited by Moran, Steven & McCloy, Daniel ...

  7. The most frequent segment in UPSID is the bilabial nasal /m/, which occurs in 425 languages and hence its segment frequency is 94.2%. There are 919 different segments in the database and the of all frequencies is rather long. The 20 most frequent consonants and the 10 most frequent vowels are: That is, the group of sounds that appear in 10 or ...

  8. If you are citing phoneme inventory data for a particular language or languages, please use the name of the language as the title, and include the original data source as an element within PHOIBLE. If possible also include the URL for the inventory being referenced. For example: UCLA Phonological Segment Inventory Database. 2014.