RHYME
Knowing HOW TO RHYME helps the students LEARN WORD ‘FAMILIES’ such as ‘day, may, say...’
RHYMING WORDS have the SAME SOUND ENDINGS. If two words rhyme, they end with the same sound, including a vowel.
-‘cut’ rhymes with ‘but’.
-He, she, we, be, free, key, knee, me, tea...rhyme. The same vowel is /i/
RHYMING WORDS
RHYMING VOWELS
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EXAMPLES
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RHYMING SOUNDS
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/ɔ/
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bought
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/bɔt/
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taught
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/tɔt/
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/oʊ/
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sold
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/soʊld/
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old
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/oʊld/
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/ɛ/
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meant
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/mɛnt/
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sent
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/sɛnt/
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/ɛ/
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read
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/rɛd/
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said
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/sɛd/
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/eɪ/
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plate
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/pleɪt/
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eight
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/eɪt/
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/eɪ/
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May
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/meɪ/
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day
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/deɪ/
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/ɪr/
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year
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/yɪr/
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dear
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/dɪr/
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/u/
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flew
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/flu/
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grew
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/gru/
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/u/
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true
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/tru/
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you
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/yu/
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/ɛr/
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care
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/kɛr/
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there
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/ðɛr/
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PHONEMES & ALLOPHONES
The allo-phones are members of a phoneme. A phoneme has got more than one allo-phone. We represent a phoneme with an allo-phone.
SOME EXAMPLES
PHONEMES
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ALLOPHONES
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/t/
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/t/ /θ/
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/d/
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/d/ /ð/
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/n/
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/n/ /ŋ/
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A PHONEME = THE ALLO-PHONES
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The actual pronunciations of a phoneme are allophones.
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An allophone is an alternative way of saying a phoneme.
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The allophones are variants of the same phoneme.
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A phoneme is an abstract unit, you don’t see or hear it in daily speech. The phoneme itself exists only in your mind.
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Allophones are pronounced differently,
but the meaning doesn’t change.
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Allophones belong to the same phoneme.
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EXAMPLES
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/d/, /ð/ are variants (allophones) of /d/ phoneme.
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/n/, /ŋ/ are variants (allophones) of /n/ phoneme.
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/t/, /θ/ are variants (allophones) of /t/ phoneme.
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/l/ at the beginning, /l/ at the end are allophones.
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/w/ is voiceless after voiceless plosives. (twice, quiz)
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Pill (aspirated), spill (unaspirated)
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RECEIVED (BRITISH) PRONUNCIATION
iː
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ɪ
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ʊ
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uː
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e
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ə
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ɜː
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ɔː
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æ
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ʌ
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ɑː
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ɒ
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TONGUE POSITION
F R O N T
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C E N T R A L
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B A C K
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iː
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ɪ
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ʊ
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uː
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e
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ə
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ɜː
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ɔː
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æ
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ʌ
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ɑː
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ɒ
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HIGH PHONEMES
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iː
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ɪ
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ʊ
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uː
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MID PHONEMES
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e
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ə
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ɜː
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ɔː
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LOW PHONEMES
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æ
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ʌ
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ɑː
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ɒ
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LIPS POSITION
SPREAD
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N E U T R A L
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ROUNDED
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iː
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ɪ
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ʊ
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uː
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e
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ə
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ɜː
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ɔː
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æ
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ʌ
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ɑː
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ɒ
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JAW POSITION
JAW CLOSED
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iː
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ɪ
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ʊ
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uː
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JAW NEUTRAL
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e
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ə
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ɜː
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ɔː
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JAW OPEN
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æ
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ʌ
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ɑː
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ɒ
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NOTE:
JAW = THE LOWER JAW = THE BOTTOM JAW
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LESSON VII
BRITISH ACCENT
VERSUS
AMERICAN ACCENT
BRITISH PRONUNCIATION (RECEIVED PRONUNCIATION)
SHORT VOWELS (FULL = STRESSED VOWELS)
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FRONT
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BACK
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CLOSE
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/ɪ/
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/ʊ/
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MID
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/e/
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/ʌ/
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OPEN
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/æ/
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/ɒ/
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LONG VOWELS (FULL = STRESSED VOWELS)
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FRONT
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CENTRAL
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BACK
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CLOSE
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/iː/
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/uː/
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MID
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/ɜː/
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/ɔː/
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OPEN
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/ɑː/
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UNSTRESSED VOWELS (REDUCED VOWELS)
BRITISH DIPH-THONGS
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CLOSING
/ɪ/ /ʊ/
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CENTRING
/ə/
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STARTING CLOSE
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/ɪə/ /ʊə/
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STARTING MID
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/eɪ/ /ɔɪ/
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/əʊ/
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/eə/
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STARTING OPEN
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/aɪ/
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/aʊ/
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AMERICAN PRONUNCIATION
SHORT VOWELS (FULL = STRESSED VOWELS)
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FRONT
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CENTRAL
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BACK
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CLOSE
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/ɪ/
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/ʊ/
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CLOSE-MID
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OPEN-MID
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/ɛ/
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/ʌ/
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OPEN
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/æ/
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LONG VOWELS (FULL = STRESSED VOWELS)
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FRONT
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CENTRAL
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BACK
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CLOSE
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/i/
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/u/
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CLOSE-MID
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/e/
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/o/
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OPEN-MID
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/ɝ/
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/ɔ/
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OPEN
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/ɑ/
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UNSTRESSED VOWELS (REDUCED VOWELS)
AMERICAN DIPH-THONGS
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CLOSING
/ɪ/ /ʊ/
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RETROFLEX
/r/
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STARTING CLOSE
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/ɪr/ /ʊr/
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STARTING MID
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/eɪ/ /ɔɪ/
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/oʊ/
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/ɛr/ /ɔr/
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STARTING OPEN
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/aɪ/
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/aʊ/
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/ɑr/
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MANNER OF ARTICULATION
STOP
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p
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b
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t
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d
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k
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g
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AFFRICATE
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tʃ
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dʒ
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FRICATIVE
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f
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v
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θ
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ð
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s
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z
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ʃ
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ʒ
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h
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NASAL
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m
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n
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ŋ
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APPROXIMANT
(CENTRAL)
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w
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r
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j
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APPROXIMANT
(LATERAL)
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l
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PLACE OF ARTICULATION
BILABIAL
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p
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b
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m
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w
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LABIO-DENTAL
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f
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v
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LABIO-VELAR
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w (ʍ)
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DENTAL
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θ
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ð
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ALVEOLAR
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t
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d
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s
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z
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n
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l
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POST-ALVEOLAR
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tʃ
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dʒ
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ʃ
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ʒ
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r
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PALATAL
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j
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VELAR
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k
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g
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ŋ
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GLOTTAL
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h
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