Definition
Consonants
Vowels
Random
Place of Articulation
100

A voiceless sound with a strong puff of air afterwards

What is aspirated

100

A voiced, bilabial, plosive consonant

What is [b]

100

A unrounded close front vowel

What is [i]

100

Symbol that communicates primary stress in an utterance

What is [ˈ]

100

Figure 1.15, 1&8

What are lips

200

A sound which completely blocks of air through the mouth such as /p/

What is a stop

200

A voiceless, velar, plosive consonant 

What is [k]

200

A back, close-mid, rounded vowel

What is [o]

200

Term for vowel in the word [saʊθ]

What is a diphthong

200

Figure 1.15, 3

What is alveolar ridge

300

A computer program that analyzes sounds and shows a display of the sound

What is a spectrogram

300

A voiceless, dental, fricative consonant 

What is [θ]

300

A close-mid, central, unrounded vowel

What is [ə]

300
The symbol on the vowel indicating high tone

What is [é]

300

Figure 1.15, 13

What is tongue back

400

Features that occur simultaneously with words in utterance such as pitch and stress 

What are suprasegmentals

400

A voiced, nasal, retroflex consonant

What is [ɳ]

400

A open-mid, central, unrounded vowel

What is [ɜ]

400

Stop, nasal, fricative and approximant are all types of this.

What are manners of articulation

400

Figure 1.15, 7

What is epiglottis

500

A symbol that can be added to a sound to indicate a phonetic value or understanding

What are diacritics

500

A voiceless, glotal, plosive consonant

What is [ʔ]

500

An open-mid, unrounded, front, low tongue placement vowel.

What is [æ]

500

one of two or more variants of the same phoneme such as [biʔn] instead of [bitən]

What are allophones

500

Figure 1.15, 5

What is soft palate/velum

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