(isim) tek sesi oluşturan iki harf

listen to the pronunciation of (isim) tek sesi oluşturan iki harf
Turkish - English
digraph
A pair of letters, especially a pair representing a single phoneme
A directed graph or digraph is a graph each of whose edges has a direction
a union of two characters representing a single sound
{i} two letters that together produce one sound
A digraph (or a directed graph) is a graph in which the edges are directed (Formally: a digraph is a (usually finite) set of vertices V and set of ordered pairs (a,b) (where a, b are in V) called edges The vertex a is the initial vertex of the edge and b the terminal vertex
Short for directed graph
A pair of letters denoting a single sound, eg ph, sh A encipherment in which the plaintext is written using letter pairs
# a b c d e f g h i j k d -a, -e, -o
The original data acquisition system used on TFTR consisted of Gould SEL computers which allowed only short file names For this reason the only two ascii characters could be reserved to identify the data files written for a particular diagnostic, and so each diagnostic been come to be known by its associated ``digraph'' For example, the digraph for the MIRI diagnostic (multiple far infared interferometer) which measures density profiles is FM For a listing of TFTR digraphs and what they mean, see Appendix B of the ``Accessing TFTR Data'' document
A directed graph
Any use of two alphabetical letters to create a single sound For instance, in phonograph, the letters <ph> spell the /f/ sound Likewise, in the word dumb, the letters <mb> create the /m/ sound, and in pick, the <ck> creates the /k/ sound English regularly uses digraphs like <ch>, <th> and <sh> to indicate sounds for which there is no single symbol in the commonly used alphabet
A pair of letters, especially a pair representing a single phoneme, such as sh (representing the phoneme /ʃ/)
a series of two letters that constitute a single sound not predicted by combining the two letters The phinal two letters of "digraph" phorm a digraph
A pair of signs or symbols (two graphs) which, together, represent a single sound or a single linguistic unit The English writing system employs many digraphs, e g , th, ch, sh, qu, etc The same two symbols may not always be interpreted as a digraph, e g , cathouse versus cathode When three signs are so combined, they are called a trigraph More than three are usually called an n-graph
Directed graph
A pair of signs or symbols (two graphs), which together represent a single sound or a single linguistic unit The English writing system employs many digraphs (for example, th, ch, sh, qu, and so on) The same two symbols may not always be interpreted as a digraph (for example, cathode versus cathouse) When three signs are so combined, they are called a trigraph More than three are usually called an n-graph
Two consecutive letters that make only one sound Examples: beat, train, and bread
a sequence of two letters representing one sound, e g 'ph' in photograph or 'th' in this and thin
two successive letters (especially two letters used to represent a single sound: `sh' in `shoe')