المرجع الالكتروني للمعلوماتية
المرجع الألكتروني للمعلوماتية

English Language
عدد المواضيع في هذا القسم 6095 موضوعاً
Grammar
Linguistics
Reading Comprehension

Untitled Document
أبحث عن شيء أخر
غزوة الحديبية والهدنة بين النبي وقريش
2024-11-01
بعد الحديبية افتروا على النبي « صلى الله عليه وآله » أنه سحر
2024-11-01
المستغفرون بالاسحار
2024-11-01
المرابطة في انتظار الفرج
2024-11-01
النضوج الجنسي للماشية sexual maturity
2024-11-01
المخرجون من ديارهم في سبيل الله
2024-11-01

وظائف الصورة الصحفية- 6- وظيفة جمالية
19/11/2022
Facing the Ultimate Unknowable
23-12-2015
طاليس
13-11-2015
أسلوب تأثير المبيدات والقدرة الانتخابية
8-12-2015
لف spin
4-7-2017
حكم المني من كلّ حيوان ذي نفس سائلة .
22-1-2016

Dental  
  
492   10:06 صباحاً   date: 16-7-2022
Author : Richard Ogden
Book or Source : An Introduction to English Phonetics
Page and Part : 127-8


Read More
Date: 2023-07-10 748
Date: 6-6-2022 476
Date: 21-7-2022 602

Dental

The fricatives [θ ð] can be made at a couple of places of articulation. For many speakers, the articulation is interdental, i.e. made with the tongue blade between (‘inter-’) the upper and lower teeth. In this case, it may protrude, or be barely visible between the teeth. Such articulations are frequently reported for varieties of American English.

In other varieties, the friction is generated against the back of the teeth and the tongue is held relatively flat so that the air escapes through quite a wide channel. This wide channel is what makes the fricatives [θ ð] so quiet in comparison with [s z]. If you make a [θ] sound and then suck air in, you should be able to feel the place where friction is generated: it is the part of the mouth which goes cold and dry. In the case of dental fricatives, this is a wide area at the front of the tongue.

Some speakers do not use dental fricatives, replacing them with labiodental ones instead, giving  for ‘thing’, for ‘thanks’, [və] for ‘the’, and [fɑ:və] for ‘father’. This phenomenon has gained a lot of attention in sociolinguistic literature and is commonly known as th-fronting.

The sounds [θ ð] are not always produced as fricatives. In some varieties of English, notably some Irish varieties and the East Coast of the USA, they are produced as dental plosives instead, , in all situations. Another possible pronunciation is as an affricate, i.e. a plosive with a fricative release: .

For many speakers, [ð] in particular is highly variable in its manner of articulation, ranging through plosive, nasal, fricative, lateral approximant, and approximant articulations: