FRICATIVE vs SIBILANT: NOUN
- A continuant consonant produced by breath moving against a narrowing of the vocal tract
- Any of several sounds produced by air flowing through a constriction in the oral cavity and typically producing a sibilant, hissing, or buzzing quality; a fricative consonant. English /f/ and /s/ are fricatives.
- A fricative consonant. See I., 1.
- A consonant, such as f or s in English, produced by the forcing of breath through a constricted passage.
- A consonant characterized by a hissing sound (like s or sh)
- A sibilant speech sound, such as English (s), (sh), (z), or (zh).
- An alphabetic sound that is uttered with hissing, as s and z, and sh and zh (in azure, etc.), also ch (tsh) and j (dzh).
FRICATIVE vs SIBILANT: ADJECTIVE
- Of speech sounds produced by forcing air through a constricted passage (as `f', `s', `z', or `th' in both `thin' and `then')
- Of, relating to, or being a fricative consonant.
- Produced by the friction or rustling of the breath, intonated or unintonated, through a narrow opening between two of the mouth organs; uttered through a close approach, but not with a complete closure, of the organs of articulation, and hence capable of being continued or prolonged; -- said of certain consonantal sounds, as f, v, s, z, etc.
- Produced by air flowing through a restriction in the oral cavity.
- Of speech sounds produced by forcing air through a constricted passage (as `f', `s', `z', or `th' in both `thin' and `then')
- Of, characterized by, or producing a hissing sound like that of (s) or (sh).
- Making a hissing sound; uttered with a hissing sound; hissing.
- Characterized by a hissing sound such as the "s" or "sh" in sash or surge.
FRICATIVE vs SIBILANT: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Characterized by friction: said of those alphabetic sounds in which the conspicuous element is a rustling of the breath through a partly opened position of the organs, as s and sh, z and zh, f and v, th and Ŧh, and so on. They are sometimes divided into subclasses, as sibilants, like s and sh, and spirants, like f and verb
- Sounded by friction, as certain musical instruments. See instrument, 3 .
- Hissing; making or having a hissing sound: as, s and z are sibilant letters.
FRICATIVE vs SIBILANT: RELATED WORDS
- Glottal stop, Diphthongs, Vowel sound, Glottal, Labiodental, Uvular, Bilabial, Velar, Continuant, Allophone, Voiceless, Fricative consonant, Spirant, Soft, Sibilant
- Dulcet, Sonorous, Quavery, Toneless, Glottal, Mellifluous, Whispery, Unmodulated, Guttural, Rhonchi, Rhonchus, Sibilant consonant, Spirant, Soft, Fricative
FRICATIVE vs SIBILANT: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Affricative, Glottal stop, Diphthongs, Vowel sound, Glottal, Velar, Uvular, Labiodental, Continuant, Bilabial, Allophone, Voiceless, Spirant, Soft, Sibilant
- Overloud, Staccato, Dulcet, Sonorous, Quavery, Toneless, Glottal, Mellifluous, Whispery, Unmodulated, Guttural, Rhonchus, Spirant, Soft, Fricative
FRICATIVE vs SIBILANT: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- European free improvised music, also invented the Daxophone, a fricative idiophone played with bows and contact mics.
- The German CH sound, found in Scottish English loch, is a dorsal fricative.
- Eroticism bowels vowels body parts fricative arousal blade waitress in the palette.
- The effect of segmental order on fricative labeling by children and adults.
- The Influence of Actual and Imputed Talker Gender on Fricative Perception, Revisited.
- CC clusters starting with fricative cannot form a complex sound.
- Learning about fricative and affricate consonants will improve your English.
- FRICATIVE: sound produced with constriction of the airstream, producing friction.
- Irish influence, although the fricative forms are also found.
- Its palatalized version is a voiceless palatal fricative.
- In Irish apparently the dentals have sibilant sounds only in Connaught.
- There was a low sibilant roar, into a third.
- Historical sibilant letters in the inside of art so you can take up.
- Neither sibilant or golden reference speaker and tonal character the midrange lush in.
- Sibilant zone, or we may encounter another roving catalyst.
- Sibilant place contrast: Perception, production, typology, and sound change.
- EQ to selectively fix the most sibilant words.
- He agreed with the Sibilant: what an experience!
- Sometimes this gurgle became sibilant, almost a whistle.
- And as a result of that union, a Sibilant offspring was created, forcing unanticipated parentage on the original Sibilant?
FRICATIVE vs SIBILANT: QUESTIONS
- How common is the assimilation of the alveolar nasal before the fricative?
- What determines the location of spectral peak location in fricative noise?
- Is the voiced labiodental fricative a variation of the /b/ phoneme?
- Is there a voiceless palatal fricative distinct from the palatal approximation?
- What is the symbol for the voiced alveolar lateral fricative?
- Which is the alveolar fricative distinct from the belted l?
- What is the voiced counterpart of the fricative [ɬ]?
- Can magnetic resonance imaging help in the treatment of posterior nasal fricative?
- Is there a voiceless labiodental approximant distinct from the fricative?
- N/A