No groups found.
| vowels definitions | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| # | Definition | Sets | |
| 1 | a e i o u | 3 sets | |
| 2 | sesli | 2 sets | |
| 3 | vocales | 2 sets | |
| 4 | made with vocal tract very open and with vocal fold vibration. | 1 set | |
| 5 | produced w/ an open oral cavity; american english has 10-14 | 1 set | |
| 6 | without considerable obstruction | 1 set | |
| 7 | slow changes in articulators; produced with relatively open vocal tract; only voicing source is used | 1 set | |
| 8 | open sounds | 1 set | |
| 9 | w/o any major interruption of air through vocal tract. | 1 set | |
| 10 | las vocales | 1 set | |
| 11 | relatively open speech sounds, generally form nucleus of syllables. (when 2 are side by side, one to right is formed with lips rounded) | 1 set | |
| 12 | most open sounds, form syllabic nuclei | 1 set | |
| 13 | articulated with tongue, lips, and teeth. | 1 set | |
| 14 | most open of all, all are voiced, resonance phenomena based on shape of vocal tract | 1 set | |
| 15 | sounds made with an open vocal tract | 1 set | |
| 16 | longer duration | 1 set | |
| 17 | produced by changing tongue and lip positioning. sound source for all is at the larynx/vocal folds all vowels are voiced vowels are longer in duration than consonants comprise the largest part of any syllable vowels are greater in intensity | 1 set | |
| 18 | forms a perfect sound when uttered alone. examples = a,e,i,o,u & sometimes w & y | 1 set | |
| 19 | low frequency | 1 set | |
| 20 | tongue may be tense or lax | 1 set | |
| 21 | sounds in which the tongue typically does not come in contact with any of the other articulators during production/always voiced and not nasalized/created with a relatively open vocal tract and have no point of constriction | 1 set | |
| 22 | the letters a,e,i,o,u and sometimes y | 1 set | |
| 23 | oral airway provides low air resistance for ____ | 1 set | |
| 24 | always voiced (adducted vocal folds) | 1 set | |
| 25 | aeiou | 1 set | |
| 26 | the letters that are not constantants, a, e, i, o, u and sometimes y. | 1 set | |
| 27 | height, place and tense/lax and lip rounding in english: high vowels tend to be tense and low are lax; front tend to be unrounded and back are rounded | 1 set | |
| 28 | a, e, i, o, u | 1 set | |
| 29 | sounds produced with almost no blockage to the air stream | 1 set | |
| 30 | are porduced with relatively free flow of air | 1 set | |
| 31 | narrowing of vocal cavity, degree of constriction, lip rounding | 1 set | |
| 32 | the speech sound such as a, e, i, o, u, | 1 set | |
| 33 | are a,e,i,o,u. | 1 set | |
| 34 | located in front/back/center depending on where the tongue is | 1 set | |
| 35 | sounds produced without any major interruption of the air flow through the vowel tract | 1 set | |
| 36 | are produced by simply changing the shape of your mouth as you speak | 1 set | |
| 37 | produced by changing the shape of the mouth | 1 set | |
| 38 | a letter representing or usually representing a vowel, as, in english, a, e, i, o, u, and sometimes w and y | 1 set | |
| 39 | in the 1700's b.c the greeks added what to the phoenicians'alphabet | 1 set | |
| 40 | have a long duration, are voiced, nucleus of the syllable, velum raised | 1 set | |