Hot Lessons
- Assimilation of place of articulation
- The components of lexical meaning
- The distinctive feature between consonants: tʃ and dʒ
- Common features of plosive, fricative, nasal consonants
- [Q/A] What are the main ways to identify the phrase structure?
- Assimilation of manner of articulation
- Intonation with “Yes” and “No”
- Function of intonation in English
- Devoiced sound phenomenon in English
- Suffixes not affect stress placement
- Difference between a nasal and a oral sound
- Difference between affricative and fricative in term of manner of production
- Phonological rules for voiced plosives: b d g
- Assimilation of voice
- Dentalization phenomenon in English language
- What happens to fortis plosives when they are syllable initial and accented?
- Difference between voiced and voiceless consonants
- Liaison in connected speech
- What makes a stop different from a fricative
- Difference between a consonant and a vowel
{"ticker_effect":"slide-v","autoplay":"true","speed":3000,"font_style":"normal"}
You may like




![feature of [dʒ] and [tʃ]](https://i0.wp.com/englishcrunch.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/distinctive-feature-between-ch-dg.jpg?fit=800%2C500&ssl=1)












