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Show 52 (t",.'tHI'4 .;w -J?I Example 7. An example of production type C Type C is a musical and physiological convergence of "characteristics" (to be designated "char." below) from type A and type B. Type A's characteristics can be described as rapid (char. 1), containing consonants (char. 2), and undirected/undefined pitch (char. 3). Type B's characteristics are pitched singing (char. 4), on vowels (char. 5), and sustained/slow moving (char. 6). Production type C contains char. 1 (rapid) from type A and char. 5 (on vowels) from type B. It also has a new characteristic: directed pitch on repetition of a single phoneme, which will be labeled char. 7. As expected, given their opposite manners of production, A and B share no characteristics, while C shares characteristics with A and B and includes a new characteristic. This relationship is demonstrated graphically in Figure 6. The next production type to be introduced also combines elements from types A and B but in a different way. It contains consonants (char. 2) from type A and pitched singing (char. 4) from type B (both characteristics unused by type C) to create type D (first appearing on the words "a woman" after 1 '00"). Like production type B, type D falls under the "Singing" category in the Appendix. Type D (see Example 8) also introduces a new characteristic, a succession of prescribed pitches, sustained pitch, i.e., a melody (char. 8). as, opposed to a single |