LIN228H1 Lecture Notes - Voiceless Alveolar Fricative, Bilabial Nasal, Dental And Alveolar Flaps

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14 Nov 2012
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English consonant phonemes manner stops tap fricatives affricates vls. vcd vcd vls vcd vls vcd nasal liquids glides bi labial. /w/* labio dental dental alveolar place retro flex post- alveolar palatal velar glottal. Phonemes are sounds that are contrastive in a given language, can create a difference in meaning: the following words illustrate the contrastive consonants of english: fie vie pie bye my wet thigh thy/then. Consonants are characterized according to voicing, place, and manner. Kochetov-2: rhotics: r-like sounds (/ / in english, liquids: cover term for both laterals and rhotics. Some additional terms (place): labial: bilabial and labiodental consonants, coronal: dental, alveolar, post-alveolar, retroflex consonants, dorsal: palatal and velar consonants. Basic naming of consonants: voicing, place, manner, e. g. voiceless alveolar fricative (voiced) alveolar lateral approximant (voiced) bilabial nasal (stop) Line drawings allow one to visualize activities in the vocal tract (see pp. Denoting specific articulations: dent = dental, p-a = post-alveolar, lat = lateral, ret = retroflex.

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