Choose your Vocab: File 2 Flashcards

1
Q

affricate

A

a sound used in speech that is like the “ch” sound in “church” or the “j” sound in “judge”

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2
Q

alveolar

A

a consonant sound such as “l,” “d,” “n,” or “t,” made with the tongue touching the skin behind your top front teeth

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3
Q

bilabial

A

a bilabial sound is one that you produce using both lips, for example the sound of “m” or “p”

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4
Q

diphthong

A

a combination of two vowel sounds said one after the other, as in the words ‘find’ and ‘fail’

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5
Q

fricative

A

a speech sound that is made by pushing air out through a small space between your teeth and your tongue or lips, or between your tongue and palate (=the inside upper part of your mouth). “F,” “z,” and “th” are fricatives

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6
Q

glottis

A

the vocal cords/folds

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7
Q

IPA

A

International Phonetic Alphabet: a system of symbols used for representing speech sounds

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8
Q

labial

A

labial sounds are ones that you pronounce with your lips closed or close together or with your top teeth touching your bottom lip. “p,” “b” , “f,” “v,” and “m” are labial sounds

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9
Q

labiodental

A

a sound pronounced with the top teeth touching the bottom lip, for example “f” and “v”

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10
Q

labiovelar

A

a sound pronounced with the lips and upper back part of your mouth, for example “w”

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11
Q

nasal

A

a speech sound such as “m” or “n” that is produced mainly through your nose

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12
Q

palatal

A

if you pronounce a sound that is palatal, especially a consonant, you pronounce it by moving your tongue near or against the hard palate

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13
Q

phonetics

A

the study of the sounds used in speech

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14
Q

plosive

A

a sound that you make by quickly stopping your breath leaving your mouth and then suddenly letting it go again. The sounds “k,” “p,” and “t” are plosives.

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15
Q

stop

A

a consonant sound produced by stopping and then starting the flow of air through your mouth

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16
Q

voiced

A

voiced sounds are produced by passing air over your vocal cords

17
Q

voiceless

A

voiceless sounds are produced without passing air over your vocal cords

18
Q

vowel frontness

A

the front of the tongue is shaping the vowel as either high or low: English /i/, /e/

19
Q

vowel height

A

the tongue is close to the top of the mouth: English /i/ /u/

20
Q

General American

A

phonemes of the standard American English