Voiced bilabial stop (plosive)
What is /b/?
What place of articulation involves both lips?
What is bilabial?
What manner completely blocks airflow and then releases it?
What is a stop (or plosive)?
Is /b/ voiced or voiceless?
What is voiced?
/m/ is voiced, bilabial, and has what manner?
What is nasal?
Voiceless alveolar fricative
What is /s/?
What place involves the tongue and the alveolar ridge?
What is alveolar?
What manner allows airflow through the nose?
What is nasal?
Is /t/ voiced or voiceless?
What is voiceless?
/s/ is voiceless, alveolar, and has what manner?
What is fricative?
Voiced postalveolar affricate
What is /ʤ/?
Which consonants are produced by narrowing the space between the back of the tongue and the velum?
What are velar consonants?
/f/ and /v/ are examples of this manner.
What are fricatives?
What does it mean if a consonant is “voiced”?
What is the vocal cords vibrate?
/d/ is voiced. Name its place and manner.
What are alveolar stop?
Voiceless glottal fricative
What is /h/?
What place of articulation is used in the consonant /θ/?
What is interdental?
/ʧ/ and /ʤ/ are produced with a stop plus a fricative—what’s their manner?
What are affricates?
Which is the voiceless counterpart of /z/?
What is /s/?
Which consonant is voiceless, interdental, and fricative?
What is /θ/?
Voiced velar nasal
What is /ŋ/?
What is the place of articulation for /ʃ/?
What is postalveolar?
What’s the manner of articulation for /l/ and /ɹ/?
What are liquids (or approximants)?
Which of the following are voiced: /g/, /f/, /v/, /k/?
What are /g/ and /v/?
Name the place, manner, and voicing of /v/
Voiced labiodental fricative