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  1. The sound /ð/ is a voiced, dental, fricative consonant. Touch the back of your upper teeth with the tip of your tongue. Breathe out, while moving your tongue sharply downward, and let air flow past your tongue and out of your mouth. Your vocal cords should vibrate. The consonant /ð/ can be in these consonant clusters:

  2. Nov 5, 2014 · The /ð/ is a sound from the ‘Consonants Pairs’ group and it is called the ‘Voiced dental fricative’. This means that you create friction between the tongue and top teeth. The /ð/ sound ...

  3. The sound /ð/ voiced, dental, fricative consonant. Touch the back of your upper teeth with the tip of your tongue. Breathe out, while moving your tongue sharply downward, and let air flow past your tongue and out of your mouth. Your vocal cords should vibrate. Spelling: "th" – that, northern. "the" - breathe, bathe.

  4. The voiced dental fricative is a consonant sound used in some spoken languages. It is familiar to English-speakers as the th sound in father.

  5. GA /θ/ is a voiceless dental fricative: the tip of the tongue forms a light contact with the inner edge of the upper front teeth while resting on the cutting edge of the lower front teeth. There is a firmer contact between the rims of the tongue and the upper side teeth and gums.

  6. Dental fricatives are consonant sounds produced with the tongue making contact with the upper and lower teeth. We have voiced and the voiceless dental fricat...

  7. Features of the voiced dental non-sibilant fricative: Its manner of articulation is fricative, which means it is produced by constricting air flow through a narrow channel at the place of articulation, causing turbulence. It does not have the grooved tongue and directed airflow, or the high frequencies, of a sibilant.

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