Vowels
Consonants
V-Related Phenomena
C-Related Phenomena
General
100

This part of the syllable is the part at which the vocal tract is the least obstructed.

Peak

100

The voiceless, post-alveolar fricative

/ʃ/

100

Phenomenon whereby a vowel assimilates to the following /r/ within the same syllable, taking some of its retroflex quality and sometimes even becoming "less different" from otherwise similar vowels

r-coloring

100

Only context where voiced obstruents are fully voiced. 

Between vowels
100

These abstract phonological units lack meaning in themselves but a change of one for another generates a different word in a given language. 

Phonemes

200

The low, central vowels of NAE

/ɑ/ and /ʌ/

200

The two phonemes of NAE that undergo flapping

/t/ and /d/

200

Two contexts where vowels become nasal

Before a nasal consonant, after a nasal consonant, and between nasal consonants

200

The two consonant phonemes that are most likely to become syllabic

/n/ and /l/

200

Of the approximately ___ consonants in the languages of the world, ___ are used in NAE.

600 and 25

300

The three phonemic diphthongs of NAE

/ɑʊ, ɑɪ, ɔɪ/

300

These criteria are used for the classification of consonants

Voicing, manner, and place of articulation


300

Three contexts where vowels become longer

1- Word-finally

2- Before sonorants

3- Before voiced non-sonorants

300

Contexts where voiceless C are aspirated.

1- Word-initially in stressed syllables

2- Word-medially in stressed syllables

3- Word-finally (except p, k, t)

300

Three obstruents

Stops, fricatives, and affricates

400

Four criteria for categorizing vowels

Frontness/backness, height, tension, and lip rounding

400
Four manners of articulation

Stops (plosives), fricatives, affricates, nasals, and approximants (liquids and glides)

400

Four characteristics of tense vowels

Muscular tension, distribution (both open and closed syllables, higher position than lax counterparts, longer than lax counterparts

400

Four pairs of vowels with high functional load

/i-ɪ/, /ɔ-oʊ/, /æ-ɑ/, /ɑ-ʌ/

400
Four types of vowel pronunciation mistakes

Substitution, deletion (aka omission), distortion, and addition (epenthesis)

500

The five lax vowels of NAE

/ɪ, ɛ, æ, ʌ, ʊ/

500

Five points of articulation of consonants in NAE

Bilabial, labiodental, interdental, alveolar, postalveolar, palatal, velar, and glottal

500

The 5 reduced vowels of NAE

[ə, ɪ, i, o, ʊ]

500

Other consonant-related phenomena

Velarization of /l/, glottalization of /t/, palatalization of alveolars, deletion of /t/ after /n/, devoicing of approximants in clusters, affrication of /r/, deletion of interdentals, dentalization of /l/, assimilation of alveolar stops

500

The 5 stages of Celce-Murcia et al.'s communicative framework

Description and Analysis, Listening Discrimination, Controlled Practice, Guided Practice, and Communicative Practice
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