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Sentences with BILABIAL

Check out our example sentences below to help you understand the context.

Sentences

1
"The bilabial consonant /p/ is produced by pressing the upper and lower lips together."
2
"In English, the word 'ball' starts with a bilabial sound."
3
"The /m/ sound in 'mother' is a bilabial nasal."
4
"Babies often start with bilabial sounds like /b/ and /p/."
5
"Some languages have many bilabial sounds, while others have none."
6
"The bilabial trill is a rare sound found in some African languages."
7
"The bilabial click is a speech sound used in various languages like Xhosa and Zulu."
8
"Articulating bilabial sounds requires the use of both lips."
9
"The bilabial fricative /ɸ/ is found in some Japanese dialects."
10
"Linguists study the articulation and characteristics of bilabial sounds."
1
"The sounds /p/, /b/, and /m/ are examples of bilabial consonants."
2
"In English, the word 'pat' starts with a bilabial sound."
3
"Some languages, such as Hindi, have a bilabial trill /ʙ/."
4
"Infants typically develop bilabial sounds before other speech sounds."
5
"The lip rounding in the bilabial sounds distinguishes them from other consonants."
6
"In phonetics, the bilabial place of articulation is important to study."
7
"The English word 'bomb' contains two bilabial consonants."
8
"Many indigenous Australian languages have a series of bilabial consonants."
9
"The bilabial click is a speech sound found in some African languages."
10
"The International Phonetic Alphabet represents the bilabial approximant as /β/."
11
"In some dialects, the bilabial sounds /p/ and /b/ are pronounced without aspiration."
12
"The term 'bilabial' is derived from the Latin words for 'two' and 'lips'."
13
"The bilabial nasal /m/ appears in many different languages around the world."
14
"Some languages have contrastive bilabial and labiodental fricatives."
15
"Babies often produce only bilabial sounds, like /m/ and /p/, in their early babbling."
1
"The sounds /p/, /b/, and /m/ are examples of bilabials in English."
2
"The term 'bilabial' is derived from the Latin words 'bi' meaning two and 'labium' meaning lip."
3
"In phonetics, bilabials are consonant sounds produced by bringing both lips together."
4
"The /w/ sound in English is sometimes classified as a labiovelar, which is a combination of a bilabial and velar sound."
5
"The word 'mom' has two bilabial sounds in a row."
6
"In sign language, the sign for 'p' is created with a bilabial movement."
7
"Infants tend to produce bilabial sounds such as /p/ and /b/ before other consonant sounds."
8
"Babies often babble with bilabial sounds like 'ba' and 'pa'."
9
"Lip-reading relies heavily on identifying bilabial movements and shapes of the lips."
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