English [sk? :] beauty [sk? r,skor]
Past tense: score past participle: score
Now participle: score plural: score
n
1, 20, 20, about 20
2. Draw a line to score
3. score (in the game); Score (in an exam)
4. Comprehensive score
5. soundtrack (of a movie or drama)
6, a large number; many
7. the truth; truth
8. Accounts, debts (of hotels, etc.)
9. Percentage and composition (percentage content)
10, music score; Music score (of a film, etc)
vi、VI、
1, score (in a game or competition), score; Score (in an exam)
2. win; success
Visual recognition system
1, score
2. Especially when a man has sex with a new partner.
3. Scoring; Draw lines; mark
4. get an evaluation; give a mark
Vermont zip code, Vermont, USA
1, score; mark
2. The score is; score ...
3. Compile music scores (including music scores of various musical instruments and parts)
4. Mark (on the surface of an object).
5. Buy (or get) drugs
Write down (debts), write down debts. ...
Keep in mind the old grudges ... and hatred ... in mind.
phonetic feature
(1) accurate record. The International Phonetic Alphabet is a sound, a symbol and a sound. That is, a phoneme is only represented by a symbol, and a symbol can only represent a fixed phoneme. For example, "pa, zhang, ai, ian" in Chinese Pinyin, in which four A's are actually four different phonemes.
However, they are all represented by a letter A. The International Phonetic Alphabet uses (or) four letters with different shapes to represent these different phonemes, and only uses A to represent the phonemes composed of these phonemes. Another example is the I in Chinese Pinyin, which stands for three phonemes. The International Phonetic Alphabet is represented by three different symbols I, I and I, and I represents the phoneme composed of these three phonemes.
(2) The text is concise, easy to learn and use. Article 5 of the Principles for the Formulation of International Phonetic Alphabet stipulates: "The appearance of new letters should be similar to that of old letters, and you can think at a glance what sounds they represent." Therefore, the phonemes represented by international phonetic symbols are as consistent as possible with the phonetic symbol categories represented by traditional Latin letters.
For example, the letters B, P and M are lip sounds, and the international phonetic symbols are used to represent the phonemes of the lips. Among them, the P that breathes air on the lips is added with an additional symbol' (which can also be represented by the small H attached to the upper right corner of the letter), while others, such as D, T, G and K, represent the middle sounds of the tip of the tongue, and all of them "determine the sound quality of the Roman letters according to international habits", so they are in line with people's usage habits.