hard consonant in a sentence
Examples
- I felt that a lot of the guitar " squeaks " were jarring and very loud, and that many of the hard consonants and " s " sounds were jarring and scratchy sounding.
- With regard to the rule, requiring the substitution of soft unaspirate consonants in the place of hard consonants, the " de [ a " that takes place in place of a vowel is not " sthnvit ".
- As the Nasutions worked with Guruh to prepare for their next project, Chrisye began to write his own songs; in doing so he noted that he had difficulty with lyrics that included hard consonants, and worked to avoid them.
- "' Gender "'may be influenced by Russian genders, as in the case of most words ending in'- ung', which are always feminine in German, but usually masculine in the mixed language because Russian nouns ending in a hard consonant are always masculine.
- If the distinction is made for all relevant consonants, then " y " and " i " can be regarded as allophones of a single phoneme, with " y " following hard consonants and " i " following soft ones ( and in initial position ).
- Soft declensions are used when the stem of the noun ends in a soft ( postalveolar or palatal-like ) consonant in all forms, while hard declensions are used by nouns with stems ending in a hard consonant in some ( but not necessarily all ) forms.
- With a body shaped like a Chinese eggplant, eyes shrouded in sunglasses, mop-like hair and a leather jacket that intimidated no one, lacking both a chin and, apparently, the ability to form hard consonants, Joey Ramone might have seemed an unlikely person to front a rock'n'roll band, let alone to galvanize a stylistic revolution.
- He evoked an old-style Broadway leading man in the days before mikes ( I mean this as a compliment ), and indeed the three principals, Americans all, brought with them a faint air of musicals, down to the diphthongs and hard consonants that occasionally flickered through the current of carefully enunciated Italian diction to betray their national origins.
- However, there exists a subset of the hard consonants, " c, dz, sz, | / rz, cz, d | ", which often derive from historical palatalizations ( for example, " rz " usually represents a historical palatalized " r " ), and which behave like the soft consonants in some respects ( for example, they normally take " e " in the nominative plural ).