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The three voice qualities are: stress, pitch, and juncture. Stress is vocal emphasis on a spoken word or part of a word, pitch is stress produced by the rise and fall of the voice, and juncture is a pause between sounds or words.
Vocal music is coming from the voice while instrumental music is coming from the instrument. As a result, vocal music can have words while instrumental music cannot.
It produced by the sounds.
Everyone who can make any vocal sounds can sing - maybe just not very well
vocal chords
At the upper end of the trachea is the larynx. Sounds are produced when air is forced past two ligaments - the vocal cords - that stretch across the larynx. The pitch and volume of the sound produced varies with the amount of tension on the vocal cords and on the amount of air being forced past them,.
The sounds are produced with the mouth (lips, tongue, teeth, palate, vocal cords, etc.)
Voiced sounds are produced when the vocal cords vibrate, creating a buzzing or humming quality. Voiceless sounds are produced without the vibration of the vocal cords, resulting in a quieter and more breathy sound. Examples of voiced sounds include /b/, /z/, and /g/, while examples of voiceless sounds include /p/, /s/, and /k/.
Speech sounds are made by the vibrations of air forced through the vocal chords, tongue and lips. For this reason languages can have distinct sounds depending on how the sounds are produced.
Vowel sounds are produced by shaping the mouth, throat, and tongue to create different resonating spaces that modify the airflow passing through them. The position of the tongue, along with the shape of the lips and openness of the oral cavity, determines the specific vowel sound produced. The vocal cords vibrate to create the sound source, which is then modified by the vocal tract to produce different vowel sounds.
Speech sounds are made by the vibrations of air forced through the vocal chords, tongue and lips. For this reason languages can have distinct sounds depending on how the sounds are produced.
Consonant sounds are produced when the flow of air is partially obstructed by the tongue, teeth, lips, or other parts of the mouth. Vowel sounds are produced when the flow of air is unobstructed and the shape of the mouth changes. Consonants and vowels work together to form words in spoken language.
Speech sounds are produced in the larynx through the vibration of the vocal cords when air passes through them. The vibration creates sound waves that are then shaped into specific sounds by the movement of the articulators, such as the tongue, lips, and teeth. The pitch, volume, and quality of the sound are determined by the tension and length of the vocal cords.
Bees buzz but the sound is produced by the speed of vibrations of their wings and not by vocal chords of any type.
Sounds are produced during talking in the vocal tract, which starts from the vocal cords in the larynx. The vocal cords vibrate to produce sound, which then resonates through the throat, mouth, and nasal cavity. Various movements and positions of the articulators, such as the tongue, lips, and teeth, shape the sound to produce different speech sounds.
The looser your vocal chords, the lower the sound. The tighter they are pulled, or the more taut they are, the higher the sound produced. This is the same as with stringed instruments.