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Introduction

The general articulatory distinction between vowels and consonants is the way they are formed in the vocal tract. If the air stream meets no obstacles, the utterance will be vocalic. If, however, the tongue, the lips or other anatomic parts obstruct the air stream, it will be consonantic. In English, a vowel can serve as an entire syllable, whereas a consonant cannot.



Dafydd Gibbon
Fri Dec 19 10:06:45 MET 1997