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This repository has been archived by the owner on Oct 22, 2019. It is now read-only.
This is not a problem of CLTS, but of your IPA. You should write a superscript nasal n (indicates pre-nasalization). Tie bars are generally ignored in CLTS, as we do not need them, since we segment the data actively, with spaces.
On Wed, 17 Apr 2019 at 19:27, Johann-Mattis List ***@***.***> wrote:
This is not a problem of CLTS, but of your IPA. You should write a
superscript nasal n (indicates pre-nasalization). Tie bars are generally
ignored in CLTS, as we do not need them, since we segment the data
actively, with spaces.
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In our data we have prenasalised affricates such as:
ɲ͡d͡ʒ and ɲ͡t͡ʃ
but when we use two tie bars only the first two symbols are joined e.g. <ɲ͡d͡ʒ> =
ɲd ʒ
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