Language

[Introduction to Linguistics] Consonants: Place of Articulation, Manner of Articulation, Voicing



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Today we look at the production and transcription of consonants in English with respect to place, manner, and voicing. There is a lot in this video, and there is no way you can grasp it all in one go. Please take the time to study the IPA chart, and do your own practice transcriptions.

For practice describing the consonants. http://depts.washington.edu/lingsup/ling200/cons-descr.php

For listening to all the sounds
https://www.llas.ac.uk/materialsbank/mb081/page_09.htm

For practicing transcription and matching English words.
http://www.tedpower.co.uk/phonetics.htm

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10 thoughts on “[Introduction to Linguistics] Consonants: Place of Articulation, Manner of Articulation, Voicing
  1. I'm not so sure about the light vs. dark l bit. The body of the tongue dips lower in dark l. The back of the tongue isn't going higher.

    Also fun fact re: Japanese morae beginning with "r": the "official" (standard) pronunciation is said to be a tap, but the more you listen, the more varied you'll find that phoneme to be, from an English standpoint. It has a wide range of allophones; it can be a tap, a trill, a full-on plosive [d] (my Japanese students often mistake English Rs for Ds, and vice-versa), or even a very English-L-like approximant (especially in ら and る).

  2. I am confused about the ´r´ and ´l´. On my IPA it says ´r´ is palatal and ´l´ is alveolar.
    You say both are alveolar. Is it a dialectal difference? Or why is it like this?

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