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Consonants sounds

Rocio parada

Created on May 20, 2023

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Transcript

Consonant sounds

ROCIO PARADA BECERRA UNIVERSIDAD NACIONAL ABIERTA Y A DISTANCIA LICENCIATURA EN LENGUAS EXTRANJERAS CON ENFASIS EN INGLES ENGLISH PHONETICS

I P A

¡Vamos!

Consonant sound: /m/ Manner of articulate: Nasal Place of articulate: Bilabial Articulators involved in its productions: The two lips. is voiced or voiceless: Voiced Examples: Mouse - Mushroom

Consonant sound: /f/ Manner of articulate: Fricative Place of articulate: Labio-dental Articulators involved in its productions: The lower lip and the upper front teeth. is voiced or voiceless: Voiceless Examples: Fever - Factory

Consonant sound: /k/ Manner of articulate: Plosive Place of articulate: Velar Articulators involved in its productions: The back of the tongue and the soft palate. is voiced or voiceless: Voiceless Examples: Keep - Cake

Consonant sound: /ʃ/ Manner of articulate: Fricative Place of articulate: Palato-alveolar Articulators involved in its productions: Front of the tongue and palate is voiced or voiceless: Voiceless Examples: Chef - Show - fish

Consonant sound: /w/ Manner of articulate: Aproximants Place of articulate: Velar Articulators involved in its productions: The lower lip and the upper front teeth is voiced or voiceless: Voiced Examples: Watch - Cow

DIPHTHONGS

Dipthong:/aʊ/ Word: mouse

Dipthong:/eɪ/ Word: name

Content Word

Content words are words that have meaning. They can be compared to grammatical words, which are structural. Nouns, main verbs, adjectives and adverbs are usually content words.

Examples:-Verbs: Eat - Comb -Adjectives: Beautiful- Ugly

function word

Function words are words that exist to explain or create grammatical or structural relationships into which the content words may fit.

Examples: Prepositions: on-to Pronouns: He-she-it

Falling Intonation

Falling intonation describes how the voice falls on the final stressed syllable of a phrase or a group of words. A falling intonation is very common in wh-questions. Where’s the nearest p↘ost-office? What time does the film f↘inish? We also use falling intonation when we say something definite, or when we want to be very clear about something: I think we are completely l↘ost. OK, here’s the magaz↘ine you wanted.

Rising Intonation

Rising intonation describes how the voice rises at the end of a sentence. Rising intonation is common in yes-no questions: 1. The boy is ↗ill? 2. Are you th↗irsty?