Consonants Flashcards
/p/ and /b/ as in tip and bit, are examples. You close both of your lips and, as the air is released (comes up from the throat), it pushes the lips apart in an explosion.
Biliabial Plosives
/t/ and /d/ as in ten and din are examples because the tongue is stuck to the alveolar ridge until the air pushes the tongue and the alveolar ridge part.
Alveolar Plosives
/ʧ/ and /ʤ/ as in chair and joy are examples. They start as plosive (/t/ and /d/) but end with a fricative because friction is made in the alveolar ridge.
Affricatives
/k/ and /g/ as in cap and gap are examples because the back part of the tongue is in contact with the soft palate or vellum until the air pushes them apart.
Velar Plosives
/f/ and /v/ as in feed and vet are examples. The top teeth are in contact with the lower lip, and the air is pushed between them, but with no explosion; the sound is made by air friction between the teeth and the lip.
Labiodental Fricatives
/θ/ and /ð/ as in moth and that are examples because the tongue is in contact with the top teeth. The air escapes with a little friction.
Dental Fricatives
/s/ and /z/ as in sip and zip or as in books and teachers are examples. They are produced as hissing sounds because air escapes with difficulty.
Alveolar Fricatives
/ʃ/ and /ʒ/ as in sugar and pleasure are examples. The sound is produced by air friction
Palato-Alveolar Fricatives
/m/ as in mum is an example. It is produced when air flows through the nasal cavity.
Bilabial Nasal
/n/ as in none is an example. It is produced when the air flows through the nasal cavity.
Alveolar Nasal
/ŋ/ as in hangs, going, singer and longer is an exmaple. The sound is produced by lowering the vellum.
Velar Nasal
/h/ as in how and high is an example. Air comes from the windpipe and through the vocal cords.
Voiceless Glottal Fricative
/l/ as in lead and bill is an example. The tongue tip touches the alveolar ridge, but the sides of the tongue are lowered so the air can escape along the sides of the tongue.
Voiced Lateral or Lateral Approximant
/r/ as in road and berry is an example. The tongue curls back into the mouth but does not touch the roof of the mouth.
Post-Alveolar
/w/ as in weep, which is also called a semi-vowel.
Labio-Velar Approximant