A syllabic consonant is to be interpreted phonologically as /ə/ plus a consonant, but phonetically as the under-stroke [ ˌ ] combining vertical line below a consonant. Thus, the word button is phonologically ['bʌtn̩] but phonetically /'bʌtən/.
举一反三
- The dark [ɫ] has two types of distributions. One is in word-final position, after vowel, as in call and real, and also after vowel, before consonant, such as cold and help. The other is syllabic [ɫ̩]: e.g. little and table.
- Which word has the voiceless consonant sound[ ʃ ]? A: he B: she
- Which of the following consonants is not a syllabic consonant? A: /m/ B: /n/ C: /l/ D: /r/
- Which of the following features can often be found in the German accent?? ;the consonant /ð/ is often pronounced as /s/|the consonant /θ/ is often pronounced as /z/|the consonant /w/ is often pronounced as /v/|the consonant /t/ is often pronounced as /d/
- When one word ends with a consonant, and the next word begins with a semi-vowel,can we link the final consonant with the semi-vowel?