The types of sonorants
What are nasals, liquids, and glides?
The types of obstruent consonants.
What are stops, fricatives, and afficates?
Speech sounds that have the same place of articulation.
What is homorganic?
Speech sounds that have the same manner and place but differ by voicing.
What is a cognate?
Sonorants are most closely related to ___.
What are vowels?
The manner of consonants that are either sibilants or non-sibilants.
What are fricatives?
The allophonic variant of /t/ only.
What is the glottal stop?
Similarities between stops and nasals.
What are complete obstruction of oral cavity and placements of articulation?
The frequency of sonorants compared to obstruents.
What is low?
What is voicing?
The glide that has a higher F2.
What is /j/?
When to use the syllabic /n/.
What is when preceding sound is homorganic, unstressed position, and doesn't sound like there's a vowel in between targeted sound and /n/?
Efficiency for a nasal consonant that is directly impacting the preceding vowel.
What is nasalization?
The place of articulation for the English affricates.
What is the hard palate?
Acoustic energy out the nasal cavity that are less intense.
What are nasal murmurs?
The transcription of wedding. **listen to how I say it**
what is [wɛdiŋ]?
______ are ALWAYS prevocalic.
What are glides?
The primary difference between sonorants and obstruents.
What is degree of constriction?
The sound source of all nasals.
What is a laryngeal sound source?
/w/ has a ____ F1 and a ____ F2
What is low and low?