Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

  1. All the words in the left-hand column have tense vowels, and the right-hand words have lax vowels. Look at this pair of words, lunettes (glasses) and lune (moon). If we just look at the surrounding consonants, it looks like both the tense and lax vowels can appear in the same environment — they both have an [l] before them and an [n] afterwards.

  2. The final piece of information that we use to classify vowels is a little trickier to explain. English makes a distinction between tense and lax vowels, which is a distinction that a lot of other languages don’t have. Tense vowels are made with greater tension in the muscles of the vocal tract than lax vowels.

    • Catherine Anderson
    • 2018
  3. Mar 17, 2024 · High back rounded tense vowel. Mid front unrounded lax vowel. Mid back rounded tense vowel. High front unrounded tense vowel. Mid central unrounded lax vowel. Answer "Mid front unrounded lax vowel" Hint: Look at an IPA chart and the information is there. Also, pronounce that sound on its own, and think about what your articulators are doing.

  4. tense y ʉ u high lax ʏ ʊ tense ø ɵ o lax œ ɔ mid Œ ɒ low Front unrounded Central unrounded Back unrounded While this yields a fairly symmetrical system of symbols and articulatory classifications, there are gaps such as the lack of tense/lax distinctions among low vowels or central vowels except for the [ ʌ] ~ [ ə] distinction.

    • 196KB
    • 14
  5. string of speech sounds (phonemes); two items distinct if they differ in length or position. each phoneme is composed of a matrix of feature specifications. features are typically binary: [±Feature] features have articulatory and acoustic correlates representing the grammatically controlled aspects of the sound implemented in the phonetic ...

  6. People also ask

  7. Lax vowels are often represented by a single vowel letter, while tense vowels are frequently represented by vowel digraphs or combinations of letters. For example, the lax vowel /ɪ/ is typically represented by the letter "i" in words like "sit" or "bit." In contrast, the tense vowel /iː/ is represented by the vowel digraph "ee" in words like ...

  1. People also search for