- § Brackets and
transcription delimiters. In
articulatory phonetics, a
consonant is a
speech sound that is
articulated with
complete or
partial closure...
-
Interdental consonants are
produced by
placing the tip of the
tongue between the
upper and
lower front teeth. That
differs from
typical dental consonants, which...
-
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...
- ⟨ ⟩, see IPA § Brackets and
transcription delimiters.
Labial consonants are
consonants in
which one or both lips are the
active articulator. The two...
- § Brackets and
transcription delimiters.
Postalveolar or post-alveolar
consonants are
consonants articulated with the
tongue near or
touching the back of the alveolar...
- delimiters. In phonetics, a
bilabial consonant is a
labial consonant articulated with both lips.
Bilabial consonants are very
common across languages. Only...
-
pulmonic consonants. See
glottalic consonants and
click consonants for more
information on the
distribution of
nonpulmonic consonants.
Ejective consonant Implosive...
- is a list of all the
consonants which have a
dedicated letter in the
International Phonetic Alphabet, plus some of the
consonants which require diacritics...
-
Uvulars are
consonants articulated with the back of the
tongue against or near the uvula, that is,
further back in the
mouth than
velar consonants. Uvulars...
- In linguistics, a
tenuis consonant (/ˈtɛn.juːɪs/ or /ˈtɛnuːɪs/) is an
obstruent that is voiceless,
unaspirated and unglottalized. In
other words, it has...