lingualt
Lingualt is a hypothetical term used in theoretical linguistics to describe a comprehensive account of tongue-based articulatory patterns across languages. The term combines the root lingual, pertaining to the tongue, with a suffix that signals a unifying framework for describing gesture timing and spatial configuration during speech. In articulatory phonetics, lingualt refers to the study of how movements of the tongue tip, blade, dorsum, and root contribute to phoneme production and to cross-language variation in coarticulation.
The approach conceptualizes speech output as the result of coordinated tongue gestures that interact with other
Methods often involve imaging and sensing technologies (e.g., ultrasound, MRI, palatography, EMA) coupled with acoustic analysis
Limitations include its theoretical scope and the lack of a single standardized methodology, leading to multiple
See also: articulatory phonetics, tongue, coarticulation, speech production, speech technology.