Files
everyone-can-use-english/1000-hours/sounds-of-american-english/2.2-consonants.md
2024-03-26 10:02:30 +08:00

6 lines
862 B
Markdown
Raw Blame History

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters
This file contains Unicode characters that might be confused with other characters. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.
# 2.2. 辅音Consonants
地球上的所有语言都一样,在自然语流中,**辅音**不会单独存在。单独的**元音**,可以构成**音节**,也可以构成或者表达意义。比如,*ah* `/ɑː/`, *oh* `/oʊ/`,或者 *Uh-Oh* `/ˈʌoʊ/`<span class="speak-word-inline" data-audio-us-female="/audios/us/Uh-Oh.mp3"></span>。但,绝大多数**辅音**必须依附于**元音**才能构成**音节**,并且,单独的辅音也不能构成意义。
All languages on Earth follow a similar pattern: in the flow of natural speech, consonants *never* stand alone. Isolated vowels, however, can form syllables and convey meaning. For instance, you have sounds like *ah* `/ɑː/`, *oh* `/oʊ/`, or *O'Oh* `/ˈɑoʊ/`. But consonants almost always need to be attached to vowels to form *syllables*, and alone, they don't carry meaning.