The tongue does not produce the sounds; it modifies them. Sound is produced in the larynx (or voicebox). The tongue waves and wiggles and shapes itself so as to change the pathway the sound takes. This alters the mix of tones and the amplitude of them, resulting in different sounds.
Sound, as we perceive it, is simply a very rapid change in air pressure that we detect with our ears (or for that matter, with a microphone). Just like a speaker, or the strings on a guitar, our vocal chords vibrate back and forth when we speak and create this change in air pressure.
Slowing down that vibration we would see that when the vocal chords move in one particular direction they "push" or "compress" the air and create high pressure and when they vibrate in the opposite direction they "pull" or "expand" the air and create low pressure.
One may have seen a visual representation of sound that looks like a long squiggly line. This is called a sound pressure graph. The middle line of this graph represents neutral pressure. Any activity above that line depicts an instance of high pressure and below is low pressure.
the use of vocal cords
oraal
it is produced by vibrations
no it cooling not smashing to gather
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 three main parts in the human speech mechanism is the lungs, the larynx, and the articulators. Human vocal cords begin to vibrate by the air that comes through the lungs which regulates the pitch and tone. All parts of the mouth such as the lips, the tongue, and the cheeks to determine what sound comes out and how loud.
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No, consonant sounds are produced by interrupting the air flow by using either the tongue or the lips. Vowel sounds are produced by changing the shape of the mouth to produce a different tone.
The sounds are produced with the mouth (lips, tongue, teeth, palate, vocal cords, etc.)
Nasal sounds are produced by allowing air to escape through the nasal cavity, such as in the sounds "m" and "n." Oral sounds are produced with the airflow coming out of the mouth, like "p" and "s." Both types of sounds play a significant role in speech production and language articulation.
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.
a current of mouth air produced by the action of the tongue, operant in forming click sounds.
sounds are produced from vibrations
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.
It produced by the sounds.
It produced by the sounds.
it is produced by vibrations
A vowel sound is an exhalation of air where a sound is produced in the larynx (voicebox) rather than being shaped by the nose and mouth (tongue, lips, teeth). It is possible to say all of the long and short vowel sounds, and some of the special sounds, with a completely open mouth: Long sounds : A, E, I, O, OO, Short sounds ah, eh, ih, aah (as in odd), and oah (as in good). Caret O (OR in the UK, sounds long) : aw
sound produced through the vibrating object .