Voiceless labiodental fricative - CompWisdom
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Topic: Voiceless labiodental fricative


  
 Fricative consonant - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
True doubly-articulated fricatives do not appear to occur in any language.
For the pharyngeals and epiglottals, approximants are more numerous than fricatives.
See table of consonants for a table of fricatives in English.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fricative_consonant   (432 words)

  
 7.1.3 Place of articulation
], for example, is a voiceless, labiodental fricative.
With the help of this detailed information we can now refer to every consonant by its location and manner of articulation; [
http://www.uni-kassel.de/fb8/misc/lfb/html/text/7-1-3.html   (188 words)

  
 Category:Fricative - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For more information, see the main article about Fricative consonant.
This page was last modified 20:50, 31 May 2005.
http://www.peekskill.us/project/wikipedia/index.php/Category:Fricative   (76 words)

  
 Introduction to Segmental Phonology: Sound Index
The following is an index of the fricative segments currently found in the feature database.
A short phonetic description is linked to a page with details about each segment.
http://www.linguistics.ucsb.edu/projects/featuresoftware/browse_sounds?soundset=25   (40 words)

  
 UNIL / Linguistique - phonetic
We distinguish below between so-called true fricatives and the related class of spirants.
Among the fricatives below are ones described as hissers and hushers.
This section describes the dorsal fricatives and the fricatives where the dorsal/lateral opposition is unimportant.
http://www2.unil.ch/ling/english/phonetique/api32-eng.html   (958 words)

  
 HLW: Word Forms: Units: Consonants 1
The voiceless fricative appears at the beginning and end of the word shush.
This is the consonant at the beginning of the word hot; this phoneme does not occur at the end of English words.
The voiceless bilabial stop is illustrated at the beginning and end of the word pep.
http://www.indiana.edu/%7Ehlw/PhonUnits/consonants1.html   (3621 words)

  
 Dictionary of Meaning www.mauspfeil.net
Both initial and final P can be combined with many other discrete consonants in English words.
In English language English and most other European languages, P is a voiceless bilabial plosive ({{IPA.html">International Phonetic Alphabet Phi (φ) in loanwords from Greek.html"_title="Meaning of f/}},_and is commonly used to transliterate Greek">Greek_language IPA).
A common digraph in English is "ph", which represents the voiceless labiodental fricative {{IPA">Greek.
http://www.mauspfeil.net/p.html   (788 words)

  
 [No title]
You must find words other than those listed in the table.)
Give the phonetic symbol for each of the sounds listed below, and provide at least 3 English words which contain all of the sounds listed.
Give a phonetic transcription (based on your pronunciation) of the following words.
http://www.ling.udel.edu/tomioka/Ling101/2001fall/hw01.htm   (214 words)

  
 Consonants: Fricatives
/zfricative.
Because of the way the flow of breath is heard in producing fricatives, fricatives are also called spirants.
Fricatives are consonants that are formed by impeding the flow of air somewhere in the vocal apparatus so that a friction-sound is produced.
http://alpha.furman.edu/~wrogers/phonemes/phono/fric.htm   (189 words)

  
 The Consonant "F"
, initially or in the vicinity of voiceless phonemes;
The consonant /f/ has been stable from EME through PDE.
http://facweb.furman.edu/~wrogers/phonemes/phone/stable/f.htm   (19 words)

  
 wikien.info: Main_Page
This is a group of two letters, both of which are different.
In some languages these indicate length, a stressed syllable or a new sound, and in some cases they are just part of the spelling convention.
Ll is the most common in English, though it represents no new sound, but that is not the case in other languages; Welsh's ll is a voiceless lateral, and in Spanish it is a palatalized l [ʎ] (Castilian only) or else a palatal fricative.
http://www.alanaditescili.net/index.php?title=Digraph_(orthography)   (482 words)

  
 Catalan SAMPA
The symbol [M] has been used in several projects for the transcription of the labiodental nasal; [F] is used here taking into account the X-SAMPA extended proposal.
http://liceu.uab.es/~joaquim/language_resources/SAMPA_Catalan.html   (269 words)

  
 Re: pronunciation for ふ/フ
The consonant of ふ/フ is either the voiceless bilabial fricative [
The voiceless labiodental fricative [f] would be understood equally, but it sounds a little odd.
http://www.sf.airnet.ne.jp/ts/japanese/message/jpnEss405uoErlebZD9.html   (147 words)

  
 Red Moon - Proto-Ingyrric
z - voiced alveolar fricative /z/, as in English.
řř - voiceless uvular trill--if ř sounds like "ggggg", then řř sounds like "kkkkk".
rr - voiceless alveolar trill--if r sounds like "ddddd", then rr sounds like "ttttt".
http://www.midnightmist.net/redmoon/en/proto-ingyrric   (880 words)

  
 SAMPA Общеевропейский проект
SAMPA computer readable phoneme alphabet for European languages, with ASCII and IPA definitions (1990) Consonants b 98 voiced bilabial plosive c 99 voiceless palatal plosive C 67 voiceless palatal fricative d 100 voiced dental/alveol.
approximant z 122 voiced alveolar fricative Z 90 voiced postalveolar fricative ?
nasal J 74 palatal nasal N 78 velar nasal p 112 voiceless bilabial plosive r 114 alveolar trill R 82 uvular trill/fricative s 115 voiceless alveolar fricative S 83 voiceless postalveolar fricative t 116 voiceless dental/alveol.
http://homepages.tversu.ru/~ips/node21.html   (203 words)

  
 The Greek Alphabet
There are sounds common in other languages that do not exist in Greek.
Notice that the second way of writing the lower case sigma is used exclusively when the letter appears at the end of a word (there is only one capital form); this rule has no exceptions.
Contrary to English, the sound of the letter does not change at the beginning of a word (it does not become a [s]; Greeks have no trouble starting a word with [p]+[s]).
http://www.cogsci.indiana.edu/farg/harry/lan/grkphon.htm   (3770 words)

  
 OT: Nascanna fionnfhuara/Cool links
The best way to think about "fh" is the way that sounds are produced in Irish.
Unlike the English "f", a voiceless sound formed by placing the teeth against the lip (voiceless labiodental fricative), the Irish "f" is bilabial (uses the lips) to make the sound and almost sounds like simply blowing air.
http://www.irishgaelictranslator.com/translation/sutra160179.html   (651 words)

  
 Language File 3 Exercises: Key
Bottom row, L to R: = vocal cords are vibrating, so sound is voiced;tongue closure at velum, so sound is velar; nasal passge is open, so sound is nasal.
Third row, L to R: = vocal cords are not vibrating, so sound is voiceless; tongue is between teeth, so sound is interdental; the only voiceless interdental in English is this sound.
[p] = vocal cords are not vibrating, so sound is voiceless; mouth is closed at the lips, so sound is bilabial; nasal passage is closed, so sound is not nasal; voiceless bilabial stop = [p]
http://www.cla.calpoly.edu/~jrubba/phon/langfiles3_key.html   (404 words)

  
 Fricativa labiodental de Voiceless
English version: Voiceless labiodental fricative Next: Plosive palatal de Voiceless Up
La fricativa labiodental voiceless es un tipo de sonido consonantal, usado en algunas idiomas habladas.
Su tipo del phonation es voiceless, que los medios él se producen sin vibraciones de las cuerdas vocales.
http://www.yotor.net/wiki/es/fr/Fricativa%20labiodental%20de%20Voiceless.htm   (245 words)

  
 Church Slavonic Pronunciation - Help Me Learn Church Slavonic
Do and indicate any pronunciation information other than the hardness or softness of the preceding consonant?
voiceless dental affricate; articulated with the tongue very low; hard consonant: the following vowel must be a back vowel regardless of how it is written
voiceless palatal fricative; tongue very low, rather dorsal; voiceless counterpart to ; hard consonant
http://justin.zamora.com/slavonic/alphabet/pronunciation.html   (499 words)

  
 F on Encyclopedia.com
In Western alphabets f has usually represented the voiceless labiodental fricative, as in the English fast.
The Greek letter corresponding to it, digamma, which probably represented a sound like w, disappeared before the classical period.
http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/F/F.asp   (575 words)

  
 Language Files 9 Selected Answers
The top right and bottom left consonants are voiceless, because there is no voicebar in the spectrogram.
The bottom left consonant is a fricative, because of the turbulent noise apparent in the spectrogram.
http://www.ling.ohio-state.edu/publications/LF9-answers/phonetics.html   (219 words)

  
 7 bit representation of the IPA
Labiodental nasal ("m with leftward tail at right")
Almost fully close front unrounded vowel ("small capital i")
http://www.blahedo.org/ascii-ipa.html   (577 words)

  
 LINGVA XRONARI
vowel, ui = short or long close front rounded vowel, b = voiced bilabial plosive, c = voiceless grooved alveopalatal affricate, ch = voiceless uvular
fricative, d = voiced alveolar plosive, f = voiceless labiodental fricative, g = voiced velar plosive, gh = voiced uvular plosive, h = voiced glottal fricative,
voiced alveolar trill, rh = voiced velar fricative,
http://www.christusrex.org/www1/pater/JPN-l-xronari.html   (107 words)

  
 [No title]
UCS ALTERNATE (wrong shape)for interchange use IPA104 + IPA155
voiced strident apico-alveolar fricative trill For interchange use IPA122 + IPA429
http://www.oasis-open.org/cover/TEIP3-teiipa-wsd.txt   (46 words)

  
 Voiceless labiodental fricative - Wikipedia
Wähle „Voiceless labiodental fricative suchen“ um nach Voiceless labiodental fricative zu suchen.
Ein Wörterbucheintrag zu Voiceless labiodental fricative hat seinen Platz im Wiktionary (Wiktionary).
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voiceless_labiodental_fricative   (144 words)

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