This is a voiceless alveolar stop-plosive.
What is "t?"
This is the place of articulation for voiced and voiceless "th."
What is interdental?
These are the three nasal sounds.
What are "m", "n", and "ng?"
The voicing characteristic of all liquids and glides.
What is voiced?
The phoneme that is represented by this phonetic symbol /ʃ/
What is "sh?"
This is a voiceless bilabial stop-plosive.
What is /p/?
This is a voiced alveolar fricative.
What is /z/?
This phoneme has the most "front" placement of all the nasal consonants.
What is "m?"
This is a voiced bilabial glide.
What is a /w/?
The phoneme that is represented by this IPA symbol /t͡ʃ /
What is "ch?"
They are the speech sounds for velar stop-plosives.
What are /k/ and /g/?
This phoneme is a voiced palatal affricate.
What is "J" or /d͡ʒ /
This is the voicing characteristic of all nasal consonants.
What is voiced?
This a voiced palatal glide.
What is /j/?
They are two articulators involved in the production of the /t/ and /d/.
What are the tongue and alveolar ridge?
They are voiced stops.
What are /b/, /d/, and /g/?
This phoneme is a voiced palatal fricative.
What is "zh" or /ʒ/?
This is the voiced velar nasal.
What is "ng" or /ŋ /
This is a voiced alveolar glide.
What is /l/?
Phonemes in this manner class are produced by rapidly sequencing a stop-plosive and then a fricative.
What are affricates?
This word, once you change the final consonant in "blurt" to a voiced bilabial stop-plosive
What is "blurb?"
This word, once you change the initial consonant in "wise" to a voiceless alveolar fricative.
What is size?
This sentence, once decoded: [go͡ʊɪŋ təˈdænts klæs ˈlɛŋkɵənz ðə spa͡ɪn]
What is, "Going to dance class lengthens the spine?"
What are place and manner?
*For an extra 200, describe the changes.
The airflow is constricted, but continuous, in this manner class of consonants.
What are fricatives?