labiodental in English

noun
1
a labiodental sound.
You may have had some problem with the words you have listed, (mostly labiodentals ) while you developed speech, which led to a psychological block making you pause awhile before saying them.
adjective
1
(of a sound) made with the lips and teeth, for example f and v.
There is a small error in the New York Times article on the addition of a symbol for the labiodental flap to the International Phonetic Alphabet that Geoff mentioned: the bilabial trill does not still await its day.

Use "labiodental" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "labiodental" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "labiodental", or refer to the context using the word "labiodental" in the English Dictionary.

1. These differ from the German bilabial-labiodental affricate <pf>, which commences with a bilabial pp.

2. Lower-case Beta (βήτα), the second letter of the modern Greek alphabet. It represents the voiced labiodental fricative: /v/

3. Labiodental fate has no room to see other people's jokes, sharing their own self-rescue has become a Rope a grasshopper.

4. Nonetheless, it is common phonetically, as it is a typical allophone of /m/ and /n/ before the labiodental fricatives and , as in English comfort, circumvent, infinitive, or invent.

5. Bet, Beth, Beh, or Vet is the second letter of the Semitic abjads, including Phoenician Bēt , Hebrew Bēt ב ‎, Aramaic Bēth , Syriac Bēṯ ܒ, and Arabic Bāʾ ب.Its sound value is a voiced bilabial stop b or a voiced labiodental fricative v .

6. Mono has 33 consonant phonemes, including three labial-velar stops (/k͡p/, /ɡ͡b/, and prenasalized /ŋ͡mɡ͡b/), an asymmetrical eight-vowel system, and a labiodental flap /ⱱ/ (allophonically a bilabial flap ) that contrasts with both /v/ and /w/.

7. Consonant CHART (ENGLISH) PLACE OF ARTICULATION MANNER VOICING Bilabial Labiodental Dental Alveolar Post-Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal Stop Voiceless p (spat) t (stack) k (scat) [/ (uh-oh)] Voiced b (bat) d (dig) g (get) Fricative Voiceless Τ f (fat) (thin) s (sat) Σ (shoe) h (hat) Voiced v (vat) ∆ (then) z (zap) Ζ (measure)

8. The present study sheds light on the phonetic causes of sound change and the intermediate stages of the diachronic pathways by studying the palatalization and Assibilation of velar stops (referred to commonly as ‘velar softening’, as exemplified by the replacement of Latin /ˈkɛntʊ/ by Tuscan Italian [ˈtʃɛnto] ‘one hundred’), and of labial stops and labiodental fricatives (also