From e8ee94552daf578acea22e9f634196146a8bfc0d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: xiaolai Date: Sat, 16 Mar 2024 08:13:24 +0800 Subject: [PATCH] keep updated --- 1000-hours/sounds-of-american-english/3.4.1-stop.md | 4 ++-- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/1000-hours/sounds-of-american-english/3.4.1-stop.md b/1000-hours/sounds-of-american-english/3.4.1-stop.md index 7fcdabdd..d4f195fc 100644 --- a/1000-hours/sounds-of-american-english/3.4.1-stop.md +++ b/1000-hours/sounds-of-american-english/3.4.1-stop.md @@ -24,9 +24,9 @@ Another frequent stop is more subtle. It's there, but you can't see or hear it. Consider the word *hotdog*. You can't hear the 't,' but the articulation is complete. So instead of hearing '/ˈhɑtˌdɔg/' or '/ˈhɑˌdɔg/,' you hear '/ˈhɑ·ˌdɔg/' – the '·' represents a stop created by the 't' sound's complete articulation without any audible output. Try the same with 'network' – the 't' applies the same principle. -这类**停顿**(*stop*),也叫**塞音**,最常见的有 3 种: +这类**停顿**(*stop*),也叫**塞音**,最常见的有 *4* 种: -There are four main types of stops, in English: +There are *4* main types of *stops*, in English: > * 唇塞音:`p`、`b`、`m` —— I just cannot *hel**p*** myself. 第四个单词 `/help/` 末尾的 `p` 就是一个唇塞音。 > * **Labial stop**: As in *I just cannot *hel**p*** myself*, the `p` in `/help/` is a labial stop.