a change in articulation
Crossword Clue

  • We have found 17 answers to crossword clue "a change in articulation"
  • The Best Answer: 10/10
AnswerCrossword Clue
lenitiona change in articulation
lenitionsLENITION, a change in articulation
weakento change (a speech sound) to an articulation requiring less effort, as from geminate to nongeminate or from stop to fricative
clavationan articulation in a socket
clavationsCLAVATION, an articulation in a socket
psellismusa defect in articulation or pronunciation also PSELLISM
psellismusesPSELLISMUS, a defect in articulation or pronunciation also PSELLISM
articulationsARTICULATION, a joint or juncture between bones or cartilages in the skeleton of a vertebrate
syndesmosisan articulation in which the contiguous surfaces of the bones are rough and are bound together by a ligament
kneeda joint in the middle part of the human leg that is the articulation between the femur, tibia, and patella
kneea joint in the middle part of the human leg that is the articulation between the femur, tibia, and patella
syndesmosesSYNDESMOSIS, an articulation in which the contiguous surfaces of the bones are rough and are bound together by a ligament
syndesmoticrelating to syndesmosis, an articulation in which the contiguous surfaces of the bones are rough and are bound together by a ligament
affricatesA phoneme that combines a plosive with an immediately following fricative or spirant sharing the same place of articulation, e.g., ch as in chair and j as in jar
affricateA phoneme that combines a plosive with an immediately following fricative or spirant sharing the same place of articulation, e.g., ch as in chair and j as in jar
bowingthe individual way of using the bow in playing a stringed instrument, including the way in which the musician approaches the music emotionally, the articulation of individual notes, and the manner in which the notes of a passage are grouped together
koppasa consonantal letter in the Greek alphabet pronounced like kappa (K) with the point of articulation further back in the throat. It became obsolete in classical (Attic) Greek orthography, but was passed on to the Romans who incorporated it into their alphabet as Q