articulatiewijze
Articulatiewijze refers to the manner in which a sound is produced in speech. It describes how the vocal tract is configured to create a specific consonant or vowel. For consonants, articulatiewijze specifies the degree of obstruction to airflow in the vocal tract. Common articulatiewijze categories include stops (complete closure and sudden release of air, like /p/ or /t/), fricatives (narrow constriction causing audible friction, like /f/ or /s/), affricates (a stop followed immediately by a fricative, like /tʃ/), nasals (air expelled through the nose, like /m/ or /n/), liquids (a constriction that is not narrow enough for friction, like /l/ or /r/), and glides (a consonant-like sound made with a vocal tract configuration similar to a vowel, like /w/ or /j/). For vowels, articulatiewijze is described by the position of the tongue in the mouth and the shape of the lips. This includes tongue height (high, mid, low) and tongue backness (front, central, back), as well as lip rounding. Understanding articulatiewijze is crucial in phonetics and phonology for describing and classifying speech sounds, and it plays a significant role in language acquisition, speech disorders, and the development of speech technologies. The specific combination of articulatiewijze and place of articulation determines the unique quality of each phoneme within a language.