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Manner of Articulation

This document discusses the manner of articulation in linguistics. It defines manner of articulation as how airflow is controlled during the production of speech sounds. It then provides examples of the main manners of articulation including plosives, nasals, trills, taps/flaps, fricatives, laterals, and approximants. For each manner, it gives a phonetic symbol example and brief description of the airflow and articulation involved.

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Yaneth Molina
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
336 views7 pages

Manner of Articulation

This document discusses the manner of articulation in linguistics. It defines manner of articulation as how airflow is controlled during the production of speech sounds. It then provides examples of the main manners of articulation including plosives, nasals, trills, taps/flaps, fricatives, laterals, and approximants. For each manner, it gives a phonetic symbol example and brief description of the airflow and articulation involved.

Uploaded by

Yaneth Molina
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 7

An Animated and Narrated Glossary of

Terms used in Linguistics


presents

Manner of Articulation

Articulators

Slide 2

Page 1
Manner of Articulation
• The manner of articulation refers to the
way airflow is controlled in the production
of a phone (i.e. a linguistic sound).

Slide 3

Manner of Articulation
on the IPA Chart

Plosive
Nasal
Trill
Tap or Flap
Fricative
Lateral
fricative
Approximant
Lateral
approximant
Manner of articulation

Slide 4

Page 2
Plosive

p
Plosives require total obstruction of airflow.

Slide 5

Nasal

n
Nasals require air to flow out of the nose.

Slide 6

Page 3
Trill

r
Trills are made by rapid succession of
contact between articulators that obstruct
airflow.

Slide 7

Tap or Flap


A tap or flap is like trill, except that there is
only one rapid contact between the
articulators.
There is some difference
between tap and flap,
but we shall not pursue
that here.
Slide 8

Page 4
Fricative

f
A fricative is formed when the stricture is
very narrow (but without total closure) so
that when air flows out, a hissing noise is
made.

Slide 9

Approximant


An approximant is a phone made when the
obstruction of airflow does not produce any
audible friction.

Slide 10

Page 5
Lateral

l
A lateral is made when air flows out of the
sides of the mouth.

Slide 11

Note
• In this presentation, we have concentrated
on the pulmonic consonants, but
manners of articulation may be used to
describe vowels and other linguistic
sounds as well.

Slide 12

Page 6
The End

Wee, Lian-Hee and Winnie H.Y. Cheung (2009)


An animated and narrated glossary of terms used in Linguistics.
Hong Kong Baptist University.

Page 7

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