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The voiceless consonant that has the same place of articulation as "b" (bilabial) and the same passive of articulation as "v" (labiodental) is "p."
It's /z/. In English its place of articulation is alveolar as in the case of /t/, and it is a fricative like /f/.
It would seem that way, but it is technically not. The "ng" in "long" is not really an "n" or a "g" but is a single sound (called a phoneme). If you say the word "no" and the word "go" and think about where you make the sounds, they are in completely different places ("n" is on the alveolar ridge while "g" is velar, towards the back of the throat). When you say "ng" in "long", it is said in the same place as a "g". More specifically, a "g" is a plosive or stop (air is temporarily stopped in the mouth before the consonant is made-also "t", "d", "p" and "b"), whereas an "n" and "ng" are nasal (sound travels through the nose). I suspect that since "ng" has the same place of articulation as a "g" and the same manner of articulation as an "n", that is why in English (and several other languages), it is often represented by both. The symbol used in phonetics to represent this sound is /ŋ/.
yes they have the same consonant
ya as long as there not going in the same place
No, the choanae are the same as the internal nares, just posterior to the nasal meatuses.
You may be thinking of a double consonant. A consonant is a letter of the alphabet that is not a vowel. A double consonant is when a word that has two of the same consonant together in the word, such as little or happy, or even Mississippi.
A repeating consonant is when the same consonant sound is repeated in close succession in a word. For example, in the word "little," the "t" sound is repeated twice, making it a repeating consonant.
You may be thinking of a double consonant. A consonant is a letter of the alphabet that is not a vowel. A double consonant is when a word that has two of the same consonant together in the word, such as little or happy, or even Mississippi.
The repetition of a consonant in a word is called consonance. Consonance is a literary device where the same consonant sound is repeated in close proximity to each other within a word.
Double consonants are two of the same consonant next to each other in a word. Examples of a double consonant include hill, pass, attack, and fall.
The word "life" rhymes with "knife" and has the same spelling pattern (consonant-vowel-consonant-e).