Sound

English Pronunciation

Introduction to American English Consonant Stops

The six English stop sounds (the b sound, p sound, g sound, k sound, d sound, and t sound) initially appear simple, but quickly reveal intricate details as learners become more familiar with their characteristics.

Pronunciation Diagram of consonant stops for ESL students and teachers

The two major points that beginner ESL/ELL students should understand about stop sounds are:

  1. The air is briefly stopped at the beginning of the sound, then released (the release of the air is called the aspiration)
  2. The sounds occur in voiced/unvoiced pairs

The subtle aspects of stop sounds to be aware and attempt mastery of include:

  1. Aspiration (the puff of air as the stop is released) is greater for unvoiced stops than for voiced stops
  2. The aspiration of stops is the greatest at the beginning of words and the beginning of stressed syllables
  3. The duration of a vowel sound before a voiced stop is greater than the duration of a vowel sound before an unvoiced stop

Voiced and unvoiced sounds

Of the eight stop sounds in English, four are voiced (meaning that the vocal cords vibrate while producing the sound) and four are unvoiced (meaning that the vocal cords do not vibrate while producing sound). Voiced and unvoiced sounds often occur in pairs of sounds with similar vocal tract shape, with the major difference between the pairs being the use of the vocal cords or not.


Key words

The table below includes a key word to demonstrate each stop sound and an audio example of that word. The stop sound of each word is underlined. The voiced sound of each pair is listed first .

Stop Key Words
b sound
p sound
/b/
/p/
boy
pen

air is stopped between the lips
g sound
k sound
/ɡ/
/k/
go
cat

air is stopped between the back of the tongue and the soft palate
d sound
t sound
/d/
/t/
do
top

air is stopped between tip of the tongue and the tooth ridge

Aspiration

While the question of the involvement of the vocal cords is the greater difference between voiced and unvoiced sounds, the amount of aspiration plays a secondary role in articulating each sound. In general, the aspiration is greater in unvoiced sounds than voiced sounds. This characteristic is complicated by the fact that, additionally, the aspiration is greater at the beginning of words and the beginning of stressed syllables than in other locations within words.

Compare the aspiration of the following stop sounds at the beginning of words. There is more of a puff of air during the aspiration of unvoiced stops.

Aspiration comparison
Unvoiced stopVoiced stop
pigbig
coldgold
timedime

Vowel lengthening

The vowel sound before voiced consonant sounds has a longer duration than the vowel sound before unvoiced counterparts. Since a stop sound at the end of a word has little aspiration, the change in vowel duration subtly helps listeners of English determine which stop sound was spoken. Some dictionaries will use a colon-like symbol of stacked triangles /ː/ to note a vowel with increased duration.

Notice the difference in vowel duration in the following minimal pairs.

Vowel length comparison
Unvoiced stopVoiced stop
wordIPA wordIPA 
rope/roʊp/robe/roʊːb/
hit/hɪt/hid/hɪːd/
buck/bʌk/bug/bʌːɡ/

NOTE: Since vowel duration is also influenced by word stress within a sentence, vowel duration due to voicing/unvoicing can be difficult to notice during a conversation.



Rate this material:


Share this page at your favorite social networking site!





Discuss this topic in our Forums!


Exercises

identify final consonant stop

consonant stops quiz

b sound / p sound minimal pairs

d sound / t sound minimal pairs

g sound / k sound minimal pairs

Stops Minimal Sets: Beginning

Stops Minimal Sets: End

Quizzes

Stop Sounds Minimal Sets

Sound Practice

stop b

stop t

stop p

stop d

stop g

stop k

Pronuncian Lessons

Lessons  

  

This lesson is available for purchase in:

Pronunciation Pages 2

PDF ebook $38 USD

Add to Cart

softcover$48 USD

Add to Cart

Download the book right now!

Click here to learn more about the book.


This lesson is available for purchase in:

Stops and Affricates ebooklet

PDF ebook $15 USD

Add to Cart

Download the book right now!

Click here to learn more about the book.


Click here to join Pronuncian for full online access to all exercises and quizzes for this lesson.


Top-Ranked Lessons

long e sound /i/
Compare long a/long e/long i
Introduction to Approximant Sounds
l sound /l/
velar l sound /ɫ/
Introduction to Stops
t sound /t/
b sound /b/
g sound /ɡ/
k sound /k/
Letter x Pronunciation: k+s or g+z