Concept in Definition ABC
Miscellanea / / July 04, 2021
By Victoria Bembibre, in Jan. 2009
A consonant is the sound of the language oral that is produced by the closure or narrowing of the vocal tract when bringing or putting in contact the organs linked with the joint causing audible turbulence. In other words, a consonant is a type of lyrics of the alphabet.
The word consonant means in Latin "to sound together with", and has to do with the idea that consonants do not have in themselves a sound themselves, but must always be accompanied by one or more vowels - the other kind of letters - to have meaning. This happens more precisely in the Spanish language, since in other languages there are words that lack vowels.
The consonants of the Spanish language are: B, C, D, F, G, H, J, K, L, M, N, Ñ, P, Q, R, S, T, V, W, X, Y and Z.
Each consonant is characterized by traits distinctive that define it as such and that are typical of every language in the world. They are: the mode of articulation (the criterion is according to how the current of air
), the point of articulation (according to the place in the oral tract where the air obstruction occurs), the mode of phonation (how the vocal cords vibrate), the VOT (or "voice onset time", that is, the delay time of phonation), the draft mechanism, the length and force articulatory.In the pronunciation of consonants there are different types of articulation that can be: labial (bilabial, lip-velar, labio-alveolar or labiodental), the coronal (linguolabial, interdental, dental, alveolar, apical, laminar, postalveolar, alveolo-palatal, retroflex), the dorsal (palatal, lip-palatal, velar, uvular, uvular-epiglottal), the radical (pharyngal, epiglottic-pharyngal, epiglottal) and the glottal.
The combination of the consonants with the vowels results in each word from the simplest to the most complex and, thus, the building of sentences.
Themes in Consonant