enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Cockatiel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cockatiel

    Cockatiel colour mutations can become even more complex as one bird can have multiple colour mutations. For example, a yellow lutino cockatiel may have pearling – white spots on its back and wings. This is a double mutation. An example of a quadruple mutation would be cinnamon cockatiel with yellowface colouring with pearling and pied ...

  3. Hindustani phonology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hindustani_phonology

    While [z] is a foreign sound, it is also natively found as an allophone of /s/ beside voiced consonants. The other three Persian loans, /q, x, ɣ/, are still considered to fall under the domain of Urdu, and are also used by some Hindi speakers; however, other Hindi speakers may assimilate these sounds to /k, kʰ, g/ respectively.

  4. Book review - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_review

    Books can be reviewed for printed periodicals, magazines, and newspapers, as school work, or for book websites on the Internet. A book review's length may vary from a single paragraph to a substantial essay. Such a review may evaluate the book based on personal taste. Reviewers may use the occasion of a book review for an extended essay that ...

  5. The Book Review - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Book_Review

    The Book Review is a peer-reviewed academic journal covering reviews for books of various subjects. [1] Regarded as India's first English-language review journal, [ 2 ] it was founded in January 1976 by Chitra Narayanan , Uma Iyengar, and Chandra Chari; [ 3 ] the latter two are the editor-in-chiefs .

  6. Bird vocalization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bird_vocalization

    Among birds which habitually borrow phrases or sounds from other species, the way they use variations of rhythm, relationships of musical pitch, and combinations of notes can resemble music. [158] Hollis Taylor's in-depth analysis of pied butcherbird vocalizations provides a detailed rebuttal to objections of birdsong being judged as music. [ 159 ]

  7. Phonological history of Hindustani - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phonological_history_of...

    Whether the actual place of articulation of this sound was truly retroflex or was dental (and just orthographically represented as a retroflex nasal) is debated. Regardless, this sound regularly becomes Hindustani dental n later on (but intervocalically, the sound becomes ṇ in other languages like Marathi, Gujarati, and Punjabi). [8]

  8. Parrot Can't Stop and Won't Stop Singing Earth, Wind and Fire

    www.aol.com/parrot-cant-stop-wont-stop-181500832...

    Kiki the cockatiel, a parrot with more than 3 million TikTok followers, knows exactly what it feels like to have a song stuck in your head. ... Some parrots learn to speak on their own and mimic ...

  9. The Sounds of the World's Languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sounds_of_the_World's...

    The Sounds of the World's Languages, sometimes abbreviated SOWL, [1] is a 1996 book by Peter Ladefoged and Ian Maddieson which documents a global survey of the sound patterns of natural languages. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] [ 4 ] Drawing from the authors' own fieldwork and experiments as well as existing literature, it provides an articulatory and acoustic ...