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Lakhina, A., Crovella, M., Diot, C. : Mining anomalies using traffic feature distributions. In: Proceedings of the 2005 Conference on Applications, Technologies, Architectures, and Protocols for Computer Communications, pp. 217–228. ACM (2005) Google Scholar 11. Liao, Q., Cieslak, D. A., Striegel, A. D., Chawla, N. V. : Using selective, short-term memory to improve resilience against DDoS exhaustion attacks. Security and Communication Networks 1(4) (2008) Google Scholar 12. Lin, C. -H., Liu, J. -C., Jiang, F. -C., Kuo, C. -T. : An effective priority queue-based scheme to alleviate malicious packet flows from distributed DoS attacks. In: International Conference on Intelligent Information Hiding and Multimedia Signal Processing, IIHMSP 2008 (August 2008) Google Scholar 13. Peng, T., Leckie, C., Ramamohanarao, K. : Survey of network-based defense mechanisms countering the DoS and DDoS problems. ACM Comput. Surv. 39 (April 2007) Google Scholar 14. Ranjan, S., Swaminathan, R., Uysal, M., Knightly, E. : DDoS-resilient scheduling to counter application layer attacks under imperfect detection.

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African American Vernacular English (AAVE), differs from standard Mainstream American English (MAE) pronunciation in a number of ways. These mostly involve reductions in consonant clusters, as well as the alteration of the dental fricatives: ð and θ ("th"); and the velar nasal: ŋ. Sound Changes [ edit | edit source] TH sounds: ð and θ [ edit | edit source] The dental fricatives: ð as in t hy, and θ as in th igh, are cross-linguistically uncommon, and in many dialects of English (not just AAVE), they become alveolar/dental plosives "d" and "t", labio-dental fricatives (v and f) or both. In AAVE, they can become either, and the change depends on the context. At the start of a word, they become plosives, therefore ð becomes d so that "the" is pronounced "da" /ð/ ---> /d/ so that /ðʌ/ ---> /dʌ/ θ becomes a t so that "thin" is pronounced "tin. " /θ/ ---> /t/ so that /θɪn/ ---> /tɪn/ Velar nasal: "ng" [ edit | edit source] AAVE does not have the velar nasal /ŋ/ (ng) found in MAE, instead, it becomes /n/, a feature is also found in some southern American English dialects.

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May 22, 2021