- § Brackets and
transcription delimiters. In
articulatory phonetics, a
consonant is a
speech sound that is
articulated with
complete or
partial closure...
- {affricate}, ⟨Cᴳ⟩ for a
consonant with a
glide as
secondary articulation (e.g. ⟨Cʲ⟩ for {palatalized
consonant} and ⟨Cʷ⟩ for {labialized
consonant}) and ⟨D̪⟩ for...
-
Velars are
consonants articulated with the back part of the
tongue (the dorsum)
against the soft palate, the back part of the roof of the
mouth (also known...
- In linguistics, a
tenuis consonant (/ˈtɛn.juːɪs/ or /ˈtɛnuːɪs/) is an
obstruent that is voiceless,
unaspirated and unglottalized. In
other words, it has...
- § Brackets and
transcription delimiters.
Postalveolar (post-alveolar)
consonants are
consonants articulated with the
tongue near or
touching the back of the alveolar...
- and
transcription delimiters. In phonetics,
ejective consonants are
usually voiceless consonants that are
pronounced with a
glottalic egressive airstream...
- is
known as
Hangul (South Korean: 한글). The
letters for the five
basic consonants reflect the
shape of the
speech organs used to
pronounce them. They are...
- ⟨ ⟩, see IPA § Brackets and
transcription delimiters. An
affricate is a
consonant that
begins as a stop and
releases as a fricative,
generally with the...
-
following tables present pulmonic and non-pulmonic
consonants. In the IPA, a
pulmonic consonant is a
consonant made by
obstructing the
glottis (the
space between...
-
pharyngeal consonant is a
consonant that is
articulated primarily in the pharynx. Some
phoneticians distinguish upper pharyngeal consonants, or "high"...