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Kajjo
1 year ago

Yeah, you’re pushing this weird, but you mean the right thing.

An acoustic analysis of the sound waves of speech makes it possible to identify which sound has been spoken. This is exactly how the language computer, which generates language or recognize and understand artificial intelligence. They analyze the sound.

The sound differs according to the sound in relation to the frequency spectrum and the waveform.

There are also freely available software for acoustic-linguistic, phonetic analysis of voice urites.

See here:

https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akustische_Phonetik

iTech01
1 year ago

Hi, short simple answer: Yes, every sound and also language always has different “shoes” or spreads differently in the air through different radiating behaviors, spatial yields etc. In addition, the human ear is of course very trained to understand these things

Tannibi
1 year ago

Not every letter, but any –> phoneme.

germanils
1 year ago

I’m not sure I understand the question…

Sound waves arise during speaking. Various sounds (“letters”) produce different sound waves. We have learned what sounds stand for which letters, and “decrypt” the sound waves that arrive in the ear.