FONETYKA PF

 0    58 tarjetas    guest3736144
descargar mp3 imprimir jugar test de práctica
 
término English definición English
Syllabic consonants are characteristic of both Polish and English.
empezar lección
F
Not all vowels are continuants.
empezar lección
F -all vowels are
Semi-vowels have the articulatory properties of vowels, but the function of consonants.
empezar lección
T
/k/is to/g/as/p/is to/b/.
empezar lección
T -voicless to voiced
All front vowels are rounded.
empezar lección
F -none of them
During the articulation of sounds the air from the lungs goes from the larynx into the windpipe.
empezar lección
F -lungs > windpipe > larynx
The part of the tongue lying behind the lower teeth is called the tip of the tongue.
empezar lección
T
A sound made with a very rapid movement of the tongue to the top of the mouth is called a flap.
empezar lección
T
The soft palate and velum are equivalent terms.
empezar lección
T
A dorsal articulation involves the tip or the blade of the tongue.
empezar lección
F - involves back of the tongue
The length of vowels often depends on their position in a word
empezar lección
T
The opening between the vocal cords is called the epiglottis.
empezar lección
F - is called glottis
British English and American English differ in the distribution of /r/.
empezar lección
T
There is only one lateral sound in English and that is /h/
empezar lección
F - its L
The initial consonant in "this" is a fricative.
empezar lección
T
The shape of the lips crucially determines the quality of all speech sounds.
empezar lección
F
In English, there are only three central vowels and they are all spread.
empezar lección
False The /ʌ/is not spread
English has no palatal affricates.
empezar lección
T
In the production of /m/, as in "mother", the vocal cords do not vibrate
empezar lección
F -they vibrate bc m is voiced
Vowels are produced with the vocal cords vibrating.
empezar lección
T - vowel are voiced
All back vowels are rounded
empezar lección
F - There are 5 back vowels and /a:/ isn't rounded.
In English, there are no velar fricatives.
empezar lección
T
The consonants in "judge" are produced with a complete closure in the mouth.
empezar lección
T
Trill and roll are synonyms
empezar lección
T
The trachea and the food passage are the same thing.
empezar lección
F
High vowels can also be called close vowels.
empezar lección
T - high=close; low = open
/b/and/m/ are good examples of homorganic consonants
empezar lección
T - homorganic consonants - consonants that have the same place of articulation
Semi-vowels are sounds which resemble both vowels and consonants.
empezar lección
T - Semi-vowels are /w/ and /j/
Retroflex sounds are those which involve the curling of the tip of the tongue.
empezar lección
T
In English, there are as many voiceless sounds as voiced ones
empezar lección
F
Vowel length can change the meaning of the words.
empezar lección
T
The Adam's apple is an important organ of speech in which the vocal
empezar lección
F
A coronal articulation involves using the back of the tongue.
empezar lección
F -A coronal articulation involves using the tip or blade of the tongue
When the velum is raised, the air can escape through the mouth and the nose.
empezar lección
F - When the velum is raised, the air can escape only through the mouth. When it's lowered, the air escapes through the nose.
The pharynx is the part of the vocal tract between the larynx and the uvula
empezar lección
T
Fricatives and approximants are very similar to each other in terms of the manner of their articulation.
empezar lección
T - both involve narrowing
The manner of articulation of English nasal consonants corresponds to that of plosives.
empezar lección
T -both involve complete closure
In both Polish and English, certain sounds are aspirated.
empezar lección
F - no aspirated sounds in PL
Retroflex sounds are those which do NOT involve the curling of the tip of the tongue.
empezar lección
F - they involve curling
Short vowels are lengthened before voiced consonants
empezar lección
T
The post-alveolar approximant is also known as the frictionless continuant
empezar lección
T
A single tap made by a flexible organ on a firmer surface is called a roll.
empezar lección
F - tap/flap
There are no palatal affricates in English.
empezar lección
T
Front vowels are not rounded.
empezar lección
T
Nasal sounds are produced with the raised velum
empezar lección
F - lowered velum
Vowels are articulated with air going continuously out of the mouth.
empezar lección
T
In English, there are no uvular sounds
empezar lección
T
When the vocal cords are apart, the sound/h/ is produced.
empezar lección
T -bc it is voiceless
The windpipe and the trachea are equivalent terms.
empezar lección
T
Not only vowels, but sometimes also consonants, can be syllabic.
empezar lección
T
In many languages there is no one-to-one correspondence between sounds and letters.
empezar lección
T
The so-called cardinal vowels are typical English vowels.
empezar lección
F
Fricatives differ from both plosives and affricates that they are formed by means of a narrowing.
empezar lección
T
The epiglottis is not an organ of speech.
empezar lección
T - glottis -głośnia, epiglittis nagłośnia
In the production of /m/, as in 'mother', the vocal cords do not vibrate.
empezar lección
F -they do
The root of the tongue is opposite the back wall of the pharynx.
empezar lección
T
The shape of the lips crucially determines the quality of all speech sounds.
empezar lección
F
The vertical distance between the upper surface of the tongue and the palate is called frontness or backness.
empezar lección
F - it is called openness or closeness -verical, frontness or backness -horizontal

Debes iniciar sesión para poder comentar.