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11. Fricatives and affricates

The articulation of a fricative involves the formation of a narrowing at some point in the speech tract such that friction is produced when the airstream is forced through the narrow opening, to produce a hissing or hushing kind of sound.

An affricate can be described as a sound that begins as a stop and ends as a fricative; it is a stop whose release is slowed down, such that considerable friction is heard.

 

This chapter consists of the following parts:

11.1 Fricatives and Voice

11.1.1 AN Fricatives and Voice

11.1.2 Grooved and Slit Fricatives

11.1.3 Lenis Fricatives: Final Devoicing

11.2 Fricatives and Place of Articulation

11.2.1 Labio-Dental Fricatives: /f,v/

11.2.2 Alveolar and Palato-Alveolar Fricatives: /s,z,ʃ,ʒ/

11.2.3 Dental Fricatives: /θ, ð/

11.2.4 TH-Fronting

11.2.5 TH-Stopping

11.2.6 Dental /t,d,n,l/

11.2.7 /θ,ð/ and Other Fricatives

11.3 The Glottal Fricative: /h/

11.4 Affricates

11.4.1 Affricates and Voice

11.4.2 Affricates and Place of Articulation

11.4.3 Post-Alveolar Affricates: /tr,dr/

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An Introduction to American English Phonetics Copyright © by Ton Broeders and Carlos Gussenhoven is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.