No, not the beer...
Consonants
The lips, the teeth, the tip of the tongue
Vowels
Family resemblances
100

This notation system is used by linguists and speech-language pathologists to precisely transcribe speech.

What is the International Phonetic Alphabet?

100

This consonant type begins as an oral stop and ends as a fricative.

What is an affricate?

100

A labiodental segment is produced by these two articulators.

What are the lips and the teeth?

100

Except in rare, exceptional circumstances, all vowels always have this characteristic.

What is voiced?

100

[p b t d k g]

What are oral stops?

200

The vowel in the word mud is represented by this symbol.

What is [ ʌ ]?

200

This degree of occlusion (manner of articulation) completely obstructs (oral) airflow.

What is stop?

200

The most common active articulator in human speech.

What is the tongue?
200

A vowel with two elements, produced at contrasting places of articulation.

What is a diphthong?

200

[ tʃ dʒ ]

What are affricates?

300

This symbol is commonly written upside-down as a shorthand in broad phonetic transcription.

What is [ ɹ ]?

300

This natural class must be described using the characteristics lateral and central.

What are liquids?

300

This is the adjective used to describe sounds articulated at the bony ridge behind the teeth.

What is alveolar?

300

Contrary to the official IPA chart, we will treat this vowel as a central vowel, not a front vowel.

What is [a]?
300

[ i ʒ l m g ]

What are voiced sounds?

400

A phone produced with voicing and the tongue in contact with both the top and bottom teeth is represented by this symbol.

What is [ ð ]?

400

The correct order of necessary and sufficient characteristics to phonetically describe any consonant.

What is voicing, place of articulation, nasality, occlusion type?

400

Also called the soft palate, this is the articulator used to close the nasal cavity off from the oral cavity.

What is the velum?

400

Even when two vowels are identical with respect to height, backness, and rounding, a language can still contrast them on the basis of this characteristic.

What is tenseness/laxness?

400

[ e ɛ o ɔ ǝ ʌ ]

What are mid vowels?
500

These two symbols represent two common English phones with a secondary articulation.

What are [ w ] and [ ɫ ]?

500

The most salient phonetic difference between the consonants: [ g k kh ].

What is voice onset time (VOT)?

500

Palatal consonants are articulated with this region of the tongue.

What is the body?

500

While neither contrast is present in English, this language contrasts vowels based on both nasality and rounding.

What is French?

500

[ f v θ ð h ]

What are non-strident fricatives?

M
e
n
u