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O M I D
06-17-2013, 07:06 PM
englishclub
Glossary of Pronunciation Terms ...

accent
the unique speech patterns of a person or group


affricate
a speech sound (consonant) that contains a stop followed by an immediate fricative, as in the ch /ʧ/ in "chair"


air flow/airstream
the flow or passage of air out of the mouth


alveolar
sound formed by touching the tip of the tongue to the upper alveolar ridge, as in /t/ or /d/


alveolar ridge
the bony region at the roof and bottom of the mouth behind the front teeth; contains the tooth sockets


approximants
consonants with a partial obstruction of airflow, as in /w/ and /r/


articulation
the act of making speech sounds


aspiration
a small "explosion" of air when you make a sound


auditory
hearing (not seeing)


bilabial
consonant sounds formed using both lips, as in /p/ or /b/


close vowel (sometimes called "high" vowel)
a vowel sound that is pronounced with the tongue close to the roof of the mouth (but not close enough to constrict the air and make a consonant), as in /i:/ in the word "free"


consonant
a speech sound made when there is complete or partial obstruction of air in the mouth, as in /v/, /h/, /d/ (compare vowel (http://www.englishclub.com/pronunciation/terms.htm#vowel))


clusters
blended sounds put together to make a single sound


curl
a position of the tongue where the tongue is shaped in a curve, not flat


dental
a consonant sound made when the tongue touches the upper teeth, as in /t/ and /n/


dialect
unique vocabulary, pronunciation and usage that is typical of a certain group of people


diphthong
a sound made by the combination of two vowel sounds in a single syllable, as in "boy", "loud" or "wide", where the sound starts as one vowel and moves towards another vowel


flatten
a positioning of the tongue where the tongue is flat not round


fricative
a speech sound (consonant) in which air is forced to pass through a small opening and creates friction, as in /f/ and /v/


glide/slide
moving the tongue while saying a word


glottal stop
the sound that is made when the vocal folds are closed very briefly; as in the middle of the word "uh-oh" (common in American English)


gum
the tissue around the base of the teeth


hard palate
hard part of the roof of the mouth


intonation
change in pitch of a sentence, up and down; the music or rhythm of speech


labiodental
sounds that are made with the lower lip and upper teeth, as in /f/ and /v/


larynx
the hollow, muscular organ in the throat that holds the vocal chords; the voice box


lateral
a speech sound that is made by touching the tongue to the middle of the alveolar ridge, allowing air to pass on both sides


lengthen sound
make the duration of the sound longer


linking (http://www.englishclub.com/pronunciation/linking.htm)
the joining of words when speaking, as in "Ca-nI-ha-va-bi-to-fegg?" (Can I have a bit of egg?)


lips spread
lips are open slightly and pulled back


lower
bottom of mouth


minimal pairs
two words that differ only in terms of one sound, as in "cat and bat" OR "fine and vine"


monophthong
a single vowel sound that does not change in auditory quality; also called a "pure vowel"


nasal consonants
consonant sounds made by pushing air through the nose, as in /m/, /n/ and /ŋ/


non-pulmonic
when the air comes from a source other than the lungs


obstruction
a blockage of air flow


open vowel (also called "low" vowel)
a vowel that is produced with the tongue far down from the roof of the mouth, as in the /a:/ sound in "far"


palatal
a sound that is made when the tongue is near or touching the roof of the mouth


palate
the roof of the mouth


phoneme
an individual speech sound


phonetic alphabet
an alphabet that represents the sounds of speech


phonetic transcription
a form of notation that uses symbols to identify the individual sounds (phonemes) in a word


plosive
a consonant sound produced when there is a complete obstruction of air followed by its sudden release, as in the /p/ of "pot"


pitch
amount of highness or lowness of a sound or speech


postalveolar
a consonant sound made with the tip of the tongue slightly back from the alveolar ridge, as in /ʃ/ in "shut"


pressed lips
top and bottom lips touching


protruded lips
rounded lips, pushed out


pulmonic
a sound that is made using the airstream directly from the lungs


raised
higher than the neutral position


reduction
the natural shortening of sounds when speaking (e.g. "going to" reduced to "gonna")


rhotic
a variety or dialect of English in which "r" is pronounced before a consonant (as in "hard") and at the end of words (as in "car"); Midwestern American English, for example, is "rhotic"


roof
the inside top part of the mouth


rounded lips
lips formed into the shape of a circle


rounded vowel
a vowel made with rounded lips


sentence stress (http://www.englishclub.com/pronunciation/sentence-stress.htm)
the placement of emphasis on specific words within a sentence or phrase


shorten sound
make the duration of a sound shorter


soft palate
soft part of the roof of the mouth


sonorant
sounds that are made when air is impeded only slightly, as in /m/, /n/


stop (stop consonant)
a consonant sound that is produced when the airflow is (temporarily) stopped entirely by the lips or tongue, as in /p/


syllable
a single unit of sound that creates one beat in a word; the word "coffee" has two syllables (cof-fee)


syllable nucleus
the central part of a syllable, usually a vowel


tap
touch quickly


tone
the emotion that is conveyed through the sound of speech (e.g. anger or sadness)


tongue
muscular tissue in the mouth used for tasting and articulating


tooth ridge
the hard area directly behind the top front teeth


trill
a vibrating sound made with a flapping tongue, as in the rolled "r" sound made when people roll their r's


upper
top of mouth


velar
of a sound that is made with the back of the tongue near the soft palate, as in the the /ŋ/ in "sing"


velum
a soft membrane on the roof of the mouth (also called "soft palate")


vocal chords (AmE cords)
two muscles inside the larynx that vibrate and create the voice


vocal tract
the entire apparatus that produces voice, starting in the lungs and ending at the lips and nostrils (openings of the mouth and nose)


voiced
of a sound made with the vocal chords (voice box) vibrating


voiceless/unvoiced
of a sound made without the vocal chords (voice box) vibrating


vowel
a speech sound made when air is free to pass through the mouth with little or no obstruction, as in sounds made with the letters a, e, i, o, u, and sometimes y (compare consonant (http://www.englishclub.com/pronunciation/terms.htm#consonant))


vowel backness
position of the tongue in relation to the back of the mouth when making a vowel sound (positions include front, near-front, centre, near-back, back)


vowel height
distance between the tongue and the roof of the mouth when pronouncing a vowel sound (IPA has 7 heights: close (highest), near-close, mid-close, mid, open-mid, near-open, open (lowest)


word stress (http://www.englishclub.com/pronunciation/word-stress.htm)
the placement of emphasis within a word that has more than one syllable