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The study of the production and perception of sounds or "phones".
7
votes
does F3 correspond to any articulatory features?
In rhotic varieties of English, F3 is lowered in r-colored vowels. It's not the only accoustic difference between r-colored and not-r-colored vowels, but it is there.
3
votes
Why are dental sounds rare?
I think that part of what makes dental plosives seem rarer than they are, is that when there is no distinction between multiple coronal series (sounds made with the tip of the tongue, roughly dental, …
2
votes
Accepted
What is a natural class in phonology? How to use phonological features to identify classes?
A "natural class" in a lot of spaces refers to "a group of things with a simple connection between all of them, that you can use to determine what is or isn't in the set." In phonology, it is frequent …
4
votes
Accepted
Dental plosives without top teeth
The apex of the tongue against the lower teeth does not block the airflow enough to make a plosive. The tongue against the front of the palate right behind where the teeth would be (the alveolar ridge …
2
votes
Accepted
Finding articulatory profiles
If you want an interactive cartoon of sagittal sections in phonetics, you might want to check out http://smu-facweb.smu.ca/~s0949176/sammy/. …