Question: What is the manner of articulation for the consonants /p/ and /k/?
Answer: Plosive or Stop
Question: What is the place of articulation for the consonants /p/ and /b/?
Answer: Bilabial
Question: What is the height of the vowel /i/?
Answer: High
Question: What term describes the use of pauses to separate units of meaning in speech, such as between phrases or clauses?
Answer: Juncture
Question: What term refers to the presence or absence of vocal cord vibration during the articulation of a consonant?
Answer: Voicing
Question: What is the manner of articulation for the consonants /f/ and /s/?
Answer: Fricative
Question: What is the place of articulation for the consonant /t/?
Answer: Alveolar
Question: Is the vowel /æ/ front or back in terms of tongue position?
Answer: Front
Question: What is the term for the prominence given to certain syllables or words in speech, often marked by increased loudness, duration, or pitch?
Answer: Stress
Question: What are pairs of words that differ by only one sound and have different meanings, such as /pat/ and /bat/?
Answer: Minimal pairs
Question: What is the manner of articulation for the consonants /tʃ/ and /dʒ/?
Answer: Affricate
Question: What is the place of articulation for the consonant /k/?
Answer: Velar
Question: Is the vowel /ʊ/ tense or lax?
Answer: Lax
Question: What is the variation in pitch across a sentence or phrase that conveys meaning or emotion, and is often used to signal questions or statements?
Answer: Intonation
Question: What is the term for variations of a single phoneme that do not change meaning and occur in different environments, such as the aspirated [pʰ] and unaspirated [p]?
Answer: Allophones
Question: What is the manner of articulation for the consonants /l/ and /r/?
Answer: Liquid
Question: What is the place of articulation for the consonants /f/ and /v/?
Answer: Labiodental
Question: What is the front high vowel?
Answer: /i/
Question: What term refers to the pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in speech, which helps to create the rhythm of spoken language?
Answer: Rhythm
Question: In English, the sounds [t] and [tʰ] occur in different environments, with [t] appearing in words like "stop" and [tʰ] in words like "top." What is this an example of?
Answer: Complementary distribution
What is the manner of articulation for the consonants /w/ and /j/?
Answer: Glide
Question: What is the place of articulation for the consonant /ʃ/?
Answer: Palatal
Question: What is the central mid vowel?
Answer: /ə/
Question: What term describes the relative highness or lowness of a speaker's voice, which can affect the meaning or emotion conveyed in speech?
Answer: Pitch
Question: In some dialects of English, the sound can be pronounced differently, such as the word "was" What is this an example of?
Answer: Free variation