For information on where consonants are produced, see also Place of articulation.

Manner Of Articulation

Manner of Articulation
[Diagram showing different manners of articulation]

Definition: The way the airstream is modified in the vocal tract

Major manners: Stops, Fricatives, Affricates, Nasals, Approximants, Trills, Taps/Flaps

Special categories: Ejectives, Implosives, Clicks

IPA Representation: Contributes to the consonant symbol choice

In phonetics, the manner of articulation refers to how the airstream is modified as it passes through the vocal tract during the production of a speech sound. Along with place of articulation and voicing, it is one of the three main parameters used to classify consonants in the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA).

Description

While the place of articulation tells us where a consonant is produced in the vocal tract, the manner of articulation describes how the articulators interact to shape the sound. This involves the degree and type of constriction in the vocal tract, which affects the airflow and creates the distinctive acoustic characteristics of different consonant types.

Major Manners of Articulation

The IPA recognizes several major manners of articulation for pulmonic consonants (those produced with air from the lungs):

Manner of Articulation Description Example Sounds Example Words
Stops/Plosives Complete blockage of the airstream followed by release [p], [b], [t], [d], [k], [g] English: "pat", "bat", "tap", "dab", "cap", "gap"
Nasals Complete oral blockage with air flowing through the nose [m], [n], [ŋ] English: "mom", "noon", "sing"
Fricatives Narrow constriction causing turbulent airflow [f], [v], [s], [z], [ʃ], [ʒ] English: "fat", "vat", "sip", "zip", "ship", "measure"
Affricates Stop followed immediately by homorganic fricative [tʃ], [dʒ], [ts], [dz] English: "church", "judge", German: "Zeit", Italian: "zero"
Approximants Slight constriction without turbulence [j], [w], [ɹ], [l] English: "yes", "way", "red", "lead"
Trills Rapid vibration of an articulator against another [r], [ʙ], [ʀ] Spanish: "perro", Czech: "řeka", French: "Paris" (uvular)
Taps/Flaps Brief contact between articulators [ɾ], [ɽ] Spanish: "pero", American English: "better", Hindi: "बारह"
Laterals Air flows around the sides of a central obstruction [l], [ʎ], [ɫ] English: "let", Italian: "famiglia", English: "feel" (velarized)

Airstream Mechanisms

Beyond the standard pulmonic consonants, there are three additional airstream mechanisms that create distinct manners of articulation:

Degrees of Constriction

Manners of articulation can be arranged along a continuum based on the degree of constriction:

  1. Complete closure: Stops, nasals
  2. Close approximation: Fricatives
  3. Medium approximation: Approximants
  4. Open approximation: Vowels

This continuum helps explain related phenomena such as:

Phonological Significance

Manner of articulation is phonologically significant in all languages, with most languages distinguishing at least between:

However, the specific manner distinctions vary significantly across languages. For example:

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