England
The United States
Scotland
Canada
Australia
100

It refers to the articulatory process in which vocal cords vibrate or do not vibrate. 

Voicing

100

The three aspects used to classify the consonant sounds are:

Voicing, place and manner of articulation.

100

It is the point of contact where an obstruction occurs in the vocal tract to produce a soun

Place of articulation

100

It refers to how the air stream from the lungs is directed to the mouth and modified by the various structures to produce a consonant phoneme.


Manner of articulation

100

Place of articulation where the front of the tongue is raised towards the palate.

Palatal

200

It´s a place of articulation where the lips are brought together.


Bilabial

200

This manner of articulation that forces the air out through a narrow opening.

Fricative

200

In this place of articulation, the back of the tongue is raised towards the velum.

Velar

200

In this manner of articulation, the sound is formed by letting the airstream flow around the sides of the tongue.

Liquid

200

In this place of articulation, the tip of the tongue is raised against the upper incisors or inserted between the upper and lower teeth.

Interdental

300

These sounds are pronounced by escaping the air through the nasal cavity.

Nasal

300

What is the place of the articulation in the first sounds in the words party, cake and teach.

Stop or Plosive

300

Manner of articulation in which consonant sounds are produced by a combination of a brief stopping of airstream with an obstructed release, causing friction.

Affricate

300

The first sound in these two words: fat and vat have the same place of articulation. Which one is it?

Labiodental

300

Place of articulation where the front of the tongue is raised towards the palate, slightly further back than an alveolar sound. 

Palatal

400

This manner of articulation is produced with the tongue in motion or gliding to or from the position of a vowel. They are also called semivowels.

Glide

400

The sounds /p/ and /b/ differ in 

Voicing / p / is voiceless and / b / is voiced. They have the same place and manner of articulation.

400

Which two sounds have the same manner of articulation: /s/, /dʒ /, /ʃ /, /ð /and /f /.

/ s / and /ʃ /

400

What is the difference between these two sounds: / k/ and / ŋ /?

These two sounds differ in voicing

/ k / is voiceless and /ŋ/ is voiced. and manner of articulation /k / is stop and /ŋ/ is nasal.

400

Pairs of words that differ in only one phoneme.

Alveolar ridge

500

Produce the following sound:

Voiceless interdental fricative

/ θ /

500

Produce the following sound:

Voiceless palatal affricate

/tʃ / 

500

Produce the following consonant sound:

Voiced bilabial nasal

/ m /

500

Produce the following consonant sound:

Voiceless glottal fricative

/ h /

500

Produce the following sound:

Voiced alveolar fricative

/ z /