Unreferenced stub auto yes date December 2009 Place of articulation Dentolabial consonants are consonants articulated with the lower teeth against the upper lip , the reverse of labiodental consonant s. They are rare cross linguistically, but one allophone of Swedish language Swedish IPAslink has been described as a velarization velarized dentolabial fricative. The diacritic for dentolabial consonants in the International Phonetic Alphabet Extended IPA diacritics Extended IPA is a superscript bridge, &thinsp IPA   &thinsp , by analogy with the subscript bridge used for labiodentals. For example, the voiced dentolabial fricative is transcribed IPA v , and the dentolabial nasal IPA m . DEFAULTSORT DentolabialConsonant Category Consonants Phonetics stub ... more details
for the alternative rock group Consonant band hatnote Not to be confused with the musical concept of Consonance and dissonance consonance Place of articulation In articulatory phonetics , a consonant is a speech ... to assign a unique and unambiguous symbol to each attested consonant. In fact, the English alphabet has fewer consonant letters than English has consonant sounds, so Digraph orthography digraph s like ... than one consonant. For example, the sound spelled th in this is a different consonant than the th ... consonant comes from Latin oblique stem c nsonant , from c nson ns littera sounding together letter ... , and the modern conception of consonant does not require cooccurrence with vowels. Letters main Writing system The word consonant is also used to refer to a Letter alphabet letter of an alphabet that denotes a consonant sound. Consonant letters in the English alphabet are B , C , D , F , G , H , J , K , L , M , N , P , Q , R , S , T , V , X , Z , and usually W and Y The letter Y stands for the consonant ... consonant and vowel, for examples W is almost always a consonant except in rare words mostly loanword ..., where C stands for consonant and V stands for vowel. This can be argued to be the only pattern found ... between consonant and vowel is not always clear cut there are syllabic consonants and non syllabic ... consonant, IPA t t , or a rhotic vowel, IPA t t Some distinguish an approximant ..., with IPA f ks to build and IPA ps ks to pull . Features Manner of articulation Each spoken consonant ... is how air escapes from the vocal tract when the consonant or approximant vowel like sound ... tract the obstruction of the consonant occurs, and which speech organs are involved. Places include bilabial consonant bilabial both lips , alveolar consonant alveolar tongue against the gum ridge , and velar consonant velar tongue against soft palate . In addition, there may be a simultaneous ... of a consonant is how the vocal cords vibrate during the articulation. When the vocal cords ... more details
. In the languages of the Caucasus labialized dorsal consonant dorsals like k and q are very common. Very few languages, however, make a distinction purely between bilabial consonant bilabials and labiodental consonant labiodentals , making labial usually a sufficient specification of a language ... Labiaal no Labialer pl Sp g oska wargowa pt Consoante labial ru simple Labial consonant ... more details
topics Dentolabialconsonant References SOWL Olson, Kenneth S. & John Hajek. 2003. Crosslinguistic ...Unreferenced date December 2009 Place of articulation In phonetics , labiodentals are consonant s Place of articulation articulated with the lower lip and the upper teeth . Labiodental consonant in IPA The labiodental consonants identified by the International Phonetic Alphabet are class wikitable rowspan 2 IPA rowspan 2 Description colspan 4 Example Language Orthography IPA Meaning style font size 140 IPA p voiceless labiodental plosive style font size 140 IPA b voiced labiodental plosive style font size 140 IPA p f voiceless labiodental affricate Tsonga language Tsonga N A IPA ti span style color 700000 font weight bold IPA p f span IPA u u hippos style font size 140 IPA b v voiceless labiodental affricate voiced labiodental affricate Tsonga language Tsonga N A IPA ile span style color 700000 font weight bold IPA b v span IPA u chin style font size 140 IPA labiodental nasal English language English sy span style color 700000 font weight bold m span phony IPA s span style color 700000 font weight bold IPA span IPA f ni symphony style font size 140 IPA f voiceless labiodental fricative English language English span style color 700000 font weight bold f span an IPA span style color 700000 font weight bold IPA f span IPA n fan style font size 140 IPA v voiced labiodental fricative English language English span style color 700000 font weight bold v span an IPA span style color 700000 font weight bold IPA v span IPA n van style font size 140 IPA labiodental approximant ... Swedish , officially described as similar to the velar consonant velar fricative x , but one dialectal ... are bilabial consonant s which together with labiodentals, form the class of labial consonant ... Consonant Category Labial consonants af Labiodentaal als Labiodentaler Konsonant ar ... simple Labiodental consonant sr sv Labiodental konsonant ta ... more details
The term labiovelar may refer to a labial velar consonant such as IPA k p a consonant made at two places of articulation, one at the lips and the other at the soft palate a labialized velar consonant such as IPA k or IPA w a consonant with an approximant like secondary articulation a velarized bilabial consonant such as IPA p or IPA m , also a consonant with an approximant like secondary articulation disambig ... more details
A laryngeal consonant is generally synonymous with a glottal consonant that is, with IPAblink h , IPAblink , and IPAblink . Besides the glottis vocal folds , the larynx includes the epiglottis and aryepiglottic folds , though epiglottal consonant epiglottal and aryepiglottal consonant s are usually counted as radical consonant radical rather than as laryngeal. However, the diversity of sounds produced in the larynx is the subject of ongoing research, and the terminology is evolving. The term laryngeal consonant is also used for laryngealization laryngealized consonants articulated in the upper vocal tract, such as Arabic phonology Arabic emphatic consonant emphatics and Korean phonology Korean Faucalized voice tense consonants. Category Consonants ling stub ... more details
Manner of articulation A nasal consonant is a consonant where the airflow is directed through the nose. These are generally assumed to be nasal stop s. However, in some languages, such as Portuguese language Portuguese , a nasal consonant may have stop and non stop allophone s. In general, therefore, a nasal consonant may be a nasal stop nasal occlusive , such as English m, n, ng a nasal approximant , as in Portuguese phonology Brazilian Portuguese nh a nasal flap consonant flap , such as the nasal retroflex lateral flap in Pashto language Pashto a nasal click , such as Zulu nq, nx, nc other nasalization nasalized consonants, such as prenasalized plosive s and nasalized fricative s IPA navigation Category Nasal consonants ... more details
IPA n align center IPA n align center IPA n align center IPA Lateral consonant Lateral align ... places of articulation include the dental consonant s at the upper tooth teeth , the alveolar consonant s at the upper gingiva gum the alveolar ridge , the various postalveolar consonant s domed palato alveolar, laminal alveolo palatal consonant alveolo palatal , and apical retroflex just behind that, the true retroflex consonant s curled back against the hard palate , and linguolabial consonant ..., alveolo palatal, retroflex IPA br Symbol Name of the consonant Example IPA height 32 IPA ... Spanish pe font color FF0000 r font o IPA pe o See also Peripheral consonant s, the set of non coronal consonants Apical consonant Laminal consonant Subapical consonant Place of articulation List of phonetics ... ru simple Coronal consonant sv Koronal konsonant zh ... more details
A depressor consonant is a consonant that depresses lowers the tone linguistics tone of its or a neighboring syllable. This is a consequence of the phonation type of voicing of the consonant. The Nguni languages of South Africa are well known for the lowering effects of certain consonants on tone, as are the Wu Chinese Wu dialects of Chinese. Specific examples of these are Zulu language Tone Zulu and Shanghainese Tones Shanghainese . See also tonogenesis ling stub Category Consonants ... more details
A subapical consonant is a consonant made by contact with the underside of the tip of the tongue. The only common subapical articulations are in the postalveolar consonant postalveolar to palatal consonant palatal region, which are called retroflex consonant retroflex . However, most so called retroflex consonants are actually apical consonant apical . True subapical retroflexes are found in the Dravidian languages of southern India . Occasionally the term sublaminal is used for subapical. However, that term might be better used for rare sounds pronounced between the underside of the tongue and the floor of the mouth, such as the sublaminal lower alveolar click pronounced between the tongue and the lower gums, symbolized by a IPA in the Extensions to the IPA Extended IPA . References Peter Ladefoged Ian Maddieson. The Sounds of the World s Languages. Oxford Blackwell 1996. ISBN 0 631 19814 8. Sanford B. Steever ed. . The Dravidian Languages. Routledge. New edition 2006. ISBN 978 0415412674. Ling stub Category Consonants br Kensonenn isbeg an teod eo Subapikalo it Consonante subapicale ... more details
A pulmonic consonant is a consonant produced by air pressure from the lungs, as opposed to ejective consonant ejective , implosive consonant implosive and click consonant s. Most languages have only pulmonic consonants. Ian Maddieson, in his survey of 566 languages, ref Ian Maddieson 2008 Glottalic Consonants . In Martin Haspelmath & Matthew S. Dryer & David Gil & Bernard Comrie eds. The World Atlas of Language Structures Online. Munich Max Planck Digital Library, chapter 7. Available online at http wals.info feature 7. Accessed on 18 January 2011 ref ref Ian Maddieson 2008 Presence of Uncommon Consonants . In Martin Haspelmath & Matthew S. Dryer & David Gil & Bernard Comrie eds. The World Atlas of Language Structures Online. Munich Max Planck Digital Library, chapter 19. Available online at http wals.info feature 19. Accessed on 18 January 2011 ref found that only 152 had ejectives, implosives, or clicks or two or three of these types that is, 73 of the world s extant languages have only pulmonic consonants. See glottalic consonant s and click consonant s for more information on the distribution of nonpulmonic consonants. See also Ejective consonant Implosive consonant Click consonant Airstream mechanism References Reflist Bibliography Martin Haspelmath, Matthew S. Dryer, David Gil, and Bernard Comrie 2005 The World Atlas of Language Structures . Oxford Univ Press, 712pp, 495.00, ISBN 978 0 19 925591 7. This book and CD apparently contain the same information as http wals.info . Ling stub Category Consonants he ... more details
Unreferenced date December 2009 An oral consonant is a consonant sound speech sound in Speech communication speech that is made by allowing air to escape from the mouth, as opposed to the nose. To create an intended oral consonant sound, the entire mouth plays a role in modifying the air s passageway. This rapid modification of the air passageway using the tongue and lips makes changes to the waveform of the sound by compressing and expanding the air. In addition to the nose and mouth, the vocal cords and lungs also make a contribution to producing speech by controlling the volume amplitude and pitch music pitch frequency of the sound. The use of the vocal cords will also determine whether the consonant is Voice phonetics voiced or voiceless . The vast majority of consonants are oral consonants, such as, for example IPA p , w , v or IPA x . The others are nasal, such as the nasal stop s IPA m or IPA . See also nasal consonant manner of articulation list of phonetics topics DEFAULTSORT Oral Consonant Category Consonants br Kensonenn dre c heno fr Consonne orale it Consonante orale lv Or ls l dzskanis nl Orale medeklinker ja ro Consoan oral ... more details
Place of articulation Radical consonants are those consonants articulated with the root base of the tongue in the throat . This includes the pharyngeal consonant pharyngeal , epiglottal consonant epiglottal , and epiglotto pharyngeal consonant epiglotto pharyngeal places of articulation, though technically epiglottal consonants take place in the larynx . The term radical was coined to help disambiguate pharyngeal , which had come to mean any consonant articulated in the throat, whether the articulator was the back of the tongue high pharyngeals or the epiglottis low pharyngeals . However, the term pharyngeal is still commonly used in the broader sense, and authors such as Miller 2005 prefer guttural , which may include glottal consonant s as well. See also Place of articulation Index of phonetics articles References SOWL Miller, Amanda 2005 , Guttural vowels and guttural co articulation in Ju hoansi . Journal of Phonetics, vol. 35, Issue 1, January 2007, pp 56 84. Category Consonants br Kensonenn gwrizienn an teod de Radikal Phonetik es Consonante radical eo Radikalo fonetiko lv Radik ls l dzskanis nl Radicaal fonetiek ja simple Radical consonant sv Radikal konsonant zh ... more details
Refimprove date April 2008 IPA notice lang en In linguistics , a consonant cluster or consonant blend is a group of consonant s which have no intervening vowel . In English, for example, the groups IPA spl and IPA ts are consonant clusters in the word splits . Some linguists argue that the term can only be properly applied to those consonant clusters that occur within one syllable . Others contend that the concept is more useful when it includes consonant sequences across syllable boundaries. According to the former definition, the longest consonant clusters in the word extra would be IPA ks and IPA ... Languages phonotactics differ as to what consonant clusters they permit. Many languages forbid consonant ... of consonant plus IPA j as in Tokyo IPA ja to kjo , the name of Japan s capital city. Across a syllable boundary, it also allows a sequence of a nasal stop plus another consonant, as in Honsh ... languages are more restrictive than English in terms of consonant clusters almost every Malayo Polynesian language forbids consonant clusters entirely. Tahitian language Tahitian , Samoan language Samoan and Hawaiian language Hawaiian are all of this sort. Standard Arabic forbids initial consonant ... , although Modern Israeli Hebrew permits initial two consonant clusters e.g. pkak cap dlat pumpkin .... ref The extent of consonant clusters in Moroccan Arabic depends on the analysis. Richard Harrell ... languages, Khmer language Khmer permits only initial consonant clusters with up to three consonants in a row per syllable. Finnish language Finnish has initial consonant clusters natively only on South .... Most spoken languages and dialects, however, are more permissive. In Burmese language Burmese , consonant ... of Georgia are drastically more permissive of consonant clustering. Clusters in Georgian language Georgian ... trainer and IPA prt skvna peeling and if grammatical affixes are used, it allows an eight consonant ... , zmrzlina IPA zmr zl na , and blnknutie IPA bl knutje , but the liquid consonant s r and l can ... more details
Place of articulation Dorsal consonants are articulated with the mid body of the tongue the dorsum . They contrast with coronal consonant s articulated with the flexible front of the tongue, and radical consonant s articulated with the root of the tongue. Function The dorsum of the tongue can contact a broad region of the roof of the mouth, from the hard palate so called palatal consonant s , the flexible soft palate velum behind that velar consonant s , to the Palatine uvula uvula at the back of the mouth cavity uvular consonant s . These distinctions are not clear cut, and sometimes finer gradations such as pre palatal, pre velar, and post velar will be noted. Because the tip of the tongue can curl back to also contact the hard palate for retroflex consonant s, consonants produced by contact between the dorsum and the palate are sometimes called dorso palatal. In different languages The most common pronunciation of the English letter G as in the g arden or to g rab is dorsal, a voiced velar plosive . The pronunciation of the letters K, Q, and sometimes C as in the c ake or to c rawl is similarly dorsal, a voiceless velar plosive . Two English language English Approximant consonant approximant s, Y as in y ellow and W as in w hite, are also dorsal consonants, palatal and Labialisation labialised velar respectively. The German language German CH sound, found in Scottish English lo ch , is a dorsal Fricative consonant fricative . See also Place of articulation List of phonetics topics References SOWL Category Consonants br Kensonenn kein an teod de Dorsal Phonetik es Consonante dorsal eo Dorsalo fr Consonne dorsale gl Posterior ko lv Dors ls l dzskanis nl Dorsaal fonetiek ja no Dorsal fonetikk nn Dorsal pl Sp g oska tylnoj zykowa zh ... more details
Infobox IPA above Laminal ipa symbol decimal 827 ipa number 410 Place of articulation A laminal consonant is a Phone phonetics phone produced by obstructing the air passage with the blade of the tongue, which is the flat top front surface just behind the tip of the tongue on the top. This contrasts with apical consonant s, which are produced by creating an obstruction with the tongue apex tongue tip only. This distinction applies only to coronal consonant s, which use the front of the tongue. Laminal vs. apical is not a very common contrast within a language. However, the contrast is very common in Australian languages , where there are usually no fricatives. Outside Australia, where such a contrast occurs, it is typically phonemic with fricative s and affricate s rather than stops, although some native languages of California make the distinction with plosive s as well, while Dahalo language Dahalo makes the distinction only in its plosives. The Basque language differentiates between laminal and apical in the alveolar consonant alveolar region, as does Serbo Croatian language Serbo Croatian , while Poles Polish and Mandarin Chinese Mandarin make the distinction with postalveolar consonant s. Because laminal consonants use the flat of the tongue, they cover a broader area of contact than apical consonants. Laminal consonants in some languages have been recorded with a broad occlusion ... common laminal articulation is sometimes called denti alveolar consonant denti alveolar it spans ... of view When looking at a person pronouncing a laminal alveolar consonant alveolar or denti ... the teeth. This gives them the common name of dental consonant dental . acoustics Acoustically however ... the shape of the resonant cavity. Also, if the release of a denti alveolar consonant is not abrupt ... consonants is unichar 033B COMBINING SQUARE BELOW html . See also Apical consonant Subapical consonant Coronal consonant List of phonetic topics References SOWL reflist Category Consonants ... more details
IndicText A zero consonant , silent initial , or null onset letter is a consonant like letter alphabet letter that is not pronounced, but indicates that a word or syllable starts with a vowel i.e. has a null onset . Some abjad s, abugida s, and alphabet s have zero consonants, generally because they have an orthographic rule that all syllables must begin with a consonant letter, whereas the language they transcribe allows syllables to start with a vowel. However, in a few cases, such as Pahawh Hmong below, the lack of a consonant letter represents a specific consonant sound, so the lack of a consonant sound requires a distinct letter to disambiguate. Uses The letter aleph is a zero consonant in Ashkenazi Hebrew . It was originally a glottal stop , a value it retains in other Hebrew dialects. In Arabic alphabet Arabic , the related letter alif is often a placeholder for a vowel. In Thaana of the Maldives, is a zero. It requires a diacritic to indicate the associated vowel is i, o, etc. This is similar to an abjad, but the vowel mark is not optional. The Lontara script for Buginese, with zero , is similar to Thaana, except that without a vowel diacritic represents an initial vowel a. The Lepcha script of Nepal is similar. Burmese script Burmese , Thai alphabet Thai , and Lao script Lao are null initial vowel support letters. Thai , for example, is ang basin . is the vowel a and the consonant ng. and pull double duty as vowels in some positions. In Canadian Aboriginal syllabics Cree and Inuit , a triangle represents a vowel initial syllable. The orientation of this triangle specifies the vowel e, i, o, a. In hangul , the zero consonant is , and appears twice in a eum velar consonant . also represents ng at the end of a syllable, but historically this was a distinct letter. In the Romanized Popular Alphabet used for Hmong language Hmong ... has a zero consonant, as well as a letter for glottal stop, with the lack of an initial consonant ... more details
Manner of articulation In phonetics , a trill is a consonant al sound produced by vibrations between the articulator and the place of articulation . Standard Spanish < rr digraph rr > as in perro , for example is an alveolar trill . Trills are very different from flap consonant flaps . Whereas with a flap or tap , a specific gesture is used to strike the active articulator against the passive one, in the case of a trill the articulator is held in place, where the airstream causes it to vibrate. Usually a trill vibrates for 2 3 periods , but may be up to 5, or even more if geminate consonant geminate . However, trills may also be produced with only a single period. While this might seem like a flap, the articulation is different trills will vary in the number of periods, but flaps do not. Trill consonants included in the International Phonetic Alphabet IPA r alveolar trill coronal trill IPA bilabial trill IPA uvular trill The bilabial trill is uncommon. The coronal trill is most frequently alveolar consonant alveolar IPA r , but dental consonant dental and postalveolar consonant postalveolar articulations IPA r and IPA r also occur. An alleged retroflex trill found in Toda language Toda has been transcribed IPA that is, the same as the retroflex flap , but might be less ambiguously ... other trill has been reported as a consonant, an epiglottal trill . Epiglottal consonant s are often allophone allophonically trilled, and in some languages the trill is the primary realization of the consonant .... The cells in the IPA chart for the velar consonant velar and pharyngeal consonant pharyngeal places .... The glottis quite readily vibrates, but this occurs as the phonation of vowels and consonants, not as a consonant ... fricative consonant frication during the trill, sounding rather like a simultaneous IPA r and IPA ... t . Extralinguistic trills A linguolabial consonant linguolabial trill IPA r is not known to be used ... identify a fricative pronounced with this same configuration as velopharyngeal . Lateral consonant ... more details
Infobox IPA above Tenuis ipa symbol decimal 749 cellpadding 1 align right style border 1px solid 88a background color f7f8ff padding 5px font size 0.9em margin 0 0 15px 10px style background color ccf Voice onset time style border bottom 1px solid ccf nowiki nowiki Aspiration phonetics Aspirated 0 Tenuis Voice phonetics Voiced In linguistics , a tenuis consonant IPAc en t n ju . s is a plosive consonant plosive or affricate consonant affricate consonant which is voiceless consonant unvoiced , aspiration phonetics unaspirated , and glottalic consonant unglottalized . That is, it has a plain phonation like IPA p, t, ts, t , k , with a voice onset time close to zero, as in Spanish p, t, ch, k, or as in English p, t, k after s s p y, s t y, s k y . In transcription, tenuis consonants are not normally marked explicitly, with voiceless IPA letters such as IPA p, t, ts, t , k assumed to be unaspirated unless indicated otherwise. However, there is an explicit diacritic for a lack of aspiration in the Extensions to the IPA , the superscript equal sign IPA p , t , ts , t , k . The term tenuis comes from Latin translations of Ancient Greek grammar, which differentiated three series of consonants, voiced IPA b d , aspirate IPA p t k , and tenuis IPA p t k these series have close parallels in other Indo European languages , such as Armenian language Armenian . In Unicode, the symbol is encoded at unichar 02ED MODIFIER LETTER UNASPIRATED html . References Bussmann, 1996. Routledge Dictionary of Language and Linguistics See also Grassmann s law Spiritus asper Spiritus lenis DEFAULTSORT Tenuis Consonant Category Phonetics Category Consonants Phonetics stub br Tenuis yezhoniezh de Tenuis it Consonante tenue ... more details
Place of articulation In Australian Aboriginal languages Australian linguistics , the peripheral consonants are a natural class encompassing consonants articulated at the extremes of the mouth labial consonant labials and velar consonant velars . That is, they are the non coronal consonant s. In Australian languages , these consonants pattern together both phonotactics phonotactically and acoustic phonetics acoustically . In Arabic and Maltese philology, the Sun and moon letters moon letters transcribe peripheral or guttural consonants . class wikitable align center colspan 2 Bilabial consonant Bilabial colspan 2 Velar consonant Velar Plosive align center IPA p align center IPA b align center IPA k align center IPA Nasal stop Nasal align center colspan 2 IPA m align center colspan 2 IPA Semivowel align center colspan 4 IPA w Phonotactics Australian languages typically favour peripheral consonants word and syllable initially, while they are not allowed or rare word and syllable finally. This is diametrically opposed to the apical consonant apicals . Acoustics Expand section date May 2008 In Martuthunira language Martuthunira , the peripheral stops IPA p and IPA k share similar allophony . While the other stops may be voiced between vowels or following a nasal, the peripherals are usually voiceless. See also Coronal consonant , the opposite set References cite book first R. M. W. last Dixon authorlink R. M. W. Dixon title Australian Languages Their Nature and Development publisher Cambridge University Press year 2002 id ISBN 0521473780, ISBN 9780521473781 url http www.cambridge.org catalogue catalogue.asp?isbn 0521473780 Category Consonants Category Australian Aboriginal languages ... more details
Infobox IPA above Apical ipa symbol ipa number 409 decimal1 826 Place of articulation An apical consonant is a Phone phonetics phone speech sound produced by obstructing the air passage with the apex of the tongue i.e. the tip of the tongue . This contrasts with laminal consonant s, which are produced by creating an obstruction with the blade of the tongue which is just behind the apex . This is not a very common distinction, and typically applied only to fricative s and affricate s. Thus many varieties of the English language have either apical or laminal pairs of t d . However, some varieties of Arabic, including Hadhrami Arabic , realizes t as laminal but d as apical. The Basque language uses this distinction for alveolar consonant alveolar fricatives, as does Serbo Croatian language Serbo Croatian . Mandarin Chinese language Mandarin Chinese uses it for postalveolar consonant postalveolar fricatives the alveolo palatal and retroflex series . St at imcets language St at imcets uses this as a secondary feature in contrasting velarized and non velarized affricates. A distinction between apical and laminal is common in Australian languages for the nasals, plosives and usually also the lateral approximants. In the International Phonetic Alphabet , the diacritic for apical consonants is unichar 033A COMBINING INVERTED BRIDGE BELOW html . See also Coronal consonant Laminal consonant List of phonetic topics Voiceless apicoalveolar fricative Voiced apicoalveolar fricative References SOWL reflist Category Consonants phonetics stub br Kensonenn beg an teod de Apikal Linguistik es Consonante apical eo Apikalo fr Consonne apicale id Apikal it Consonante apicale lv Apik ls l dzskanis hu Apik lis hang nl Apicaal fonetiek ja pl Sp g oski apikalne i laminalne ro Consoan apical ru sv Apikal zh ... more details
Infobox musical artist See Wikipedia WikiProject Musicians name Consonant image caption image size background group or band origin Boston, Massachusetts Boston , Massachusetts genre Alternative rock years active 2001 ? label Fenway Recordings Fenway associated acts Mission of Burma , Come U.S. band Come , Codeine band Codeine , Bedhead band Bedhead , The New Year website current members Clint Conley br Chris Brokaw br Winston Braman br Matt Kadane past members notable instruments Consonant is an alternative rock group formed by singer guitarist Clint Conley in 2001. In the late 1970s, Conley cofounded Mission of Burma , a pioneering Boston post punk group. After mostly dropping out of music for the 1980s and 1990s, Conley began writing songs, often with input from poet Holly Anderson. Conley formed Consonant in 2001, along with guitarist Chris Brokaw , bassist Winston Braman , and drummer Matt Kadane previously of Bedhead band Bedhead . Though notably less experimental than Mission of Burma, critic Mark Deming declares Consonant is a fine return to the spotlight for Conley . ref Allmusic class album id r584664 pure url yes Consonant at Allmusic ref Discography Consonant April 9, 2002 Love and Affliction August 19, 2003 References Reflist Category Alternative rock groups from Massachusetts Category Musical groups from Boston, Massachusetts Category Musical groups established in 2001 Category Mission of Burma ... more details
Sound change Consonant harmony is a type of long distance phonology phonological assimilation linguistics assimilation akin to the similar assimilatory process involving vowel s, i.e. vowel harmony . Examples A good discussion of consonant harmony typology is found in Rose and Walker s 2004 paper in the journal Language . A Typology of Consonant Agreement as Correspondence. One of the more common harmony processes is coronal harmony . This type of harmony affects the coronal fricatives, such as s and sh in a word, requiring all the coronal fricatives in the word to belong either to the Alveolar consonant anterior class s like sounds or the Postalveolar consonant anterior class sh like sounds . Such patterns are found in the Dene Athabaskan languages such as Navajo language Navajo Young and Morgan 1987, McDonough 2003 , Tahltan Shaw 1991 , Western Apache language Western Apache , and in Chumashan languages Chumash on the California coast Applegate 1972, Campbell 1997 , to name a few examples. In Tahltan, Shaw shows that the coronal harmony affects three coronal fricatives, Voiceless alveolar ... consonant alveolar fricative , as in the following forms unicode s ik a container and its ..., as in most languages with consonant harmony, there is a constraint on the shape of roots ... word, even at a distance. Various Austronesian languages exhibit consonant harmony among the liquid consonant s, with r assimilating at a distance to l or vice versa. Guaran language Guaran ... includes a nasal vowel or consonant or not. For instance, the reflexive prefix is realized as oral ... Finnish does have one native voiced consonant voiced stop consonant stop , d , but it is not subject ... 51. LINCOM. Rose, S. and R. Walker 2004 . A Typology of Consonant Agreement as Correspondence .... 1991 . Consonant harmony systems the special status of coronal harmony. The special status of Coronal ..., University of New Mexico Press. DEFAULTSORT Consonant Harmony Category Assimilation linguistics ... more details
The Consonant C are a Canadian alternative pop group formed in 2005 in Calgary . They are currently unsigned. They pull their influences from various genres of music including classical, jazz, punk rock and folk. Under the name The Summerwood Warren they co organize and perform in monthly themed music and art shows, which bring together members from the Calgary arts community. Members The band is now a six member, multi instrumental ensemble. Current members are Mark Connolley Mendoza bass, banjo, guitar, vocals , Laura Leif ukulele, guitar, bass, piano, glockenspiel, vocals , Jennifer Crighton harp, glockenspiel, vocals , Clea Foofat piano, cello, ukulele, glockenspiel, vocals , Jared Andres drums and Danny Vescarelly guitar, mandolin, bass . The band had previously gone through four and five ... CBC Radio ref History The Consonant C was formed by six friends in Calgary, Alberta. Clea .... ref http www.facebook.com pages The Consonant C 6153554499 Facebook.com Biography Retrieved October ... article music music previews consonant c krazy glue only more so The Consonant C like Krazy ... directions. ref Bio section. The Consonant C Myspace . Retrieved from http www.myspace.com theconsonantc ... and Lethbridge. ref http www.theconsonantc.com Consonant C.com Biography Retrieved October 16 08 ref The Consonant C s music has been described as soft and subtle, yet powerful nonetheless ref Jesse Locke. http www.theconsonantc.com The Consonant C spreads the love. The Calgary Sun 08 03 07. Retrieved .... The Consonant C like Krazy Glue only more so. FastForward Weekly 04 05 07 Retrieved October 16 ... ref Kyle Francis. The Consonant C like Krazy Glue only more so. FastForward Weekly 04 05 07 Retrieved ... the http www.myspace.com theconsonantc Consonant C MySpace page . References Citations Reflist External links http www.theconsonantc.com The Consonant C Official Website http profile.myspace.com index.cfm?fuseaction user.viewprofile&friendid 79078304 The Consonant C at Myspace DEFAULTSORT Consonant ... more details
Manner of articulation In phonetics , liquids or liquid consonants are a class of consonant s consisting of lateral consonant s together with rhotic consonant rhotic s. ref name lm182 Ladefoged and Maddieson 1996 , p. 182 ref Distribution Liquids as a class often behave in a similar way in the phonotactics of a language for example, they often have the greatest freedom in occurring in consonant cluster s. ref name lm182 In some languages, such as Japanese language Japanese , there is one liquid phoneme which may have both lateral and rhotic allophone s. ref name lm182 English language English has two liquid phonemes, one lateral, IPAslink l and one rhotic, IPAslink r , exemplified in the words l ed and r ed . Many other European languages have one lateral and one rhotic phoneme. Some, such as Greek language Greek , Italian language Italian and Serbo Croatian language Serbo Croatian , have more than two liquid phonemes. These two languages have the set IPA l r , with two laterals and one rhotic. Similarly, the Iberian languages contrast four liquid phonemes. IPA l , IPA , IPA , and a fourth phoneme that is an alveolar trill in all but Portuguese language Portuguese , where it is a guttural r guttural trill or fricative. Some European languages, like Russian language Russian and Irish language Irish , contrast a palatalization palatalized lateral rhotic pair with an unpalatalized or velarization velarized set e.g. IPA l r l r in Russian . Elsewhere in the world, two liquids of the types mentioned above remains the most common attribute of a language s consonant inventory ... of languages do not have rhotics at all and there is a wide variety of lateral consonant lateral ... on meter poetry meter in classical Greek verse when they occur as the second member of a consonant ... SOWL Category Consonants Liquid consonant Category Phonetics Liquid consonant Category Phonology Liquid consonant br Kensonenn linkus ca Consonant l quida de Liquida es Consonante l quida eo Likvido ... more details