Because there is less space for the water to come out of. If you squeeze the hose, the water comes out faster. To further demonstrate my confusion, take for example a hose. Maybe we can only tell they are the vowel sounds because of their relative sound in relation to each other, I don't know. For example, I don't know if we can just hear a recording of an ee in the middle of its pronunciation, and tell it's an ee sound. How the shape of the mouth actually produces these sounds. This produces the ee /i/ sound, the oo sound, the ah sound, the oh sound, and everything in between. Wanted to see if one could demonstrate with another instrument like a pipe, how you could create the vowel sounds.įor example, IPA divides the sounds into front and back of the mouth/tongue blocking airflow, and open/closed-ness of the air passage by the tongue. This might be a basic question but I am confused about how mouth shapes for vowels, at a deeper level, are producing different sounds.
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