A consonant is a letter of the alphabet that represents a basic speech sound produced by obstructing the breath in the vocal tract. All the letters in the alphabet apart from A, E, I, O, and U are consonants. (A, E, I, O, and U are vowels.)
Table of Contents
How Consonants Are Formed
Why Consonants Are Important
Interesting Words with Only Consonants
Test Time!
How Consonants Are Formed
Here are some examples of how consonants are formed by obstructing the breath in the vocal tract.
T is pronounced using the tongue (front part)
K is pronounced using the tongue (back part)
B is pronounced with the lips
H is pronounced in the throat
F is pronounced by forcing air through a narrow gap
M is pronounced using the nasal passage
If you make any consonant sound, you will notice some obstruction of the breath from the lungs. This is how consonants differ from vowels. Vowels are formed with an open configuration of the vocal tract. In other words, when pronouncing a vowel, there is vibration of the vocal cords but no audible friction.
A consonant can be combined with a vowel to form a syllable.
Why Consonants Are Important
There are two good reasons to care about consonants.
Use "a" (not "an") before a consonant sound. Note the word sound. (The ruling is not use "a" before a consonant.)
It was a unique experience to receive an unequivocal answer.
(Even though "unique" and "unequivocal" start with the same letter (the same two letters in fact), "unique" starts with a consonant sound (Y) while "unequivocal" starts with a vowel sound. Remember that you must use "a" (not "an") before a consonant sound.)
Becoming a eunuch wasn't a one-off deal – it was a two-off deal.
("Eunuch" and "one-off" both start with vowels but with consonant sounds.)
Read more about "an" and "a" on the page about indefinite articles.
Be particularly careful with abbreviations.
She was injured in a RTA.
She was injured in an RTA.
(The letter "R" is a consonant, but the initialism RTA is pronounced "ar-tee-ay," i.e., it starts with a vowel sound. Therefore, "an" is correct.)
A MAFF official came to stuff an MRSA outbreak.
(The acronym MAFF attracts "a" because it is pronounced "maf," i.e., it starts with a consonant sound. However, the initialism MRSA attracts "an" because it is pronounced "em-ar-ess-ay," i.e., it starts with a vowel sound.)
Read more about using "an" and "a" with abbreviations.
(Reason 2) Use consonance to add rhythm and musicality to your writing.
Consonance is a literary technique created by repeating the same consonant sound in neighboring words. It is used by poets and lyricists to compel their audiences to consider the near rhyme created by consonance. Consonance is not the same as alliteration, which sees neighboring words all starting with the same letter or sound.
I earn my keep by cracking locks or picking a pockets.
She swung her fist in angst against the beast.
The new logo says boorish and English but also stylish.
Read more about consonance.
Key Points
Use "a" (not "an") if the next word starts with a consonant sound.
Use consonance to compel your readers to think more deeply about your word choice.
Interesting Words with Only Consonants
With seven consonants, "rhythms" is the longest word without any vowels.There are three words with six consonants and no vowels:
He moved very spryly.
("Spryly" means in a nimble or agile manner.)
She is sylphy.
("Sylphy" means like a "sylph" (a slender graceful girl).)
Eclipses occur at times of syzygy.
("Syzygy" is the straight-line configuration of three or more celestial bodies.)
Some might argue that these words do contain vowels because they include Y, which is often called a semi-vowel. (There is more on this on the vowels page.)
With no "vowels," we have crwth (a stringed instrument) and cwtch (a shed, cuddle, or hiding place). But, both of these words derive from Welsh, which typically treats W like the U in "cut."
This page was written by Craig Shrives.
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In phonetics (a branch of linguistics), a phone is any distinct speech sound or gesture, regardless of whether the exact sound is critical to the meanings of words. In contrast, a phoneme is a speech sound in a given language that, if swapped with another phoneme, could change one word to another.
https://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Phone_(phonetics)
that is not a vowel. It also refers to letters of the alphabet that represent those sounds: Z, B, T, G, and H are all consonants. Consonants are all the non-vowel sounds, or their corresponding letters: A, E, I, O, U and sometimes Y are not consonants. In hat, H and T are consonants.
Consonants such as b, c, d, g, h, k, l, n, p, t, and w can appear as silent letters in words. Examples of such words include debt, subtle, crescent, scene, handsome, bridge, align, light, honour, technology, knell, knowledge, alms, palm, autumn, hymn, cupboard, psychology, listen, patch, etc.
There are 21 consonants in the English alphabet—B, C, D, F, G, H, J, K, L, M, N, P, Q, R, S, T, V, W, X, Y, Z. It's important to remember that certain consonant combinations can create different sounds altogether.
In English, vowels are the letters a, e, i, o, u, and sometimes y. Consonants are all the other letters in the alphabet that are not vowels, such as b, d, g, n, r, s, and t. Consonant sounds are made by blocking air using your teeth, tongue, or lips.
Phonetically, it is easy to give definitions: a vowel is any sound with no audible noise produced by constriction in the vocal tract, and consonant is a sound with audible noise produced by a constriction.
For the curious, the list of the top 10 letters used in the English language typically consists of some arrangement of the following letters: E, T, A, O, I, N, S, R, H, and L.
Consonants are formed by the placement of articulators – Articulators, such as the tongue, teeth, soft palate, and lips, block or limit the release of air to create closed, consonant sounds. There are seven types of consonants – The five main groups include plosives, approximants, fricatives, nasals, and affricates.
A consonant is a speech sound that is not a vowel. It also refers to letters of the alphabet that represent those sounds: Z, B, T, G, and H are all consonants. Consonants are all the non-vowel sounds, or their corresponding letters: A, E, I, O, U and sometimes Y are not consonants. In hat, H and T are consonants.
In rhotic American English, the consonants spoken most frequently are /n, ɹ, t/. (/ɹ/ is less common in non-rhotic accents.) The most frequent consonant in many other languages is /p/.
Consonance is a literary device that occurs when two words have the same consonant sound following different vowel sounds. For example, the words 'same' and 'home' have the same 'm' sound, but the vowel sounds before it are different.
The word consonant may be used ambiguously for both speech sounds and the letters of the alphabet used to write them. In English, these letters are B, C, D, F, G, J, K, L, M, N, P, Q, S, T, V, X, Z and often H, R, W, Y.
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