Manners of articulation Obstruent Stop Affricate Fricative Strident Sibilant Sonorant Nasal Approximant Semivowel Vowel Vibrant Flap/Tap Trill Liquid Rhotic Lateral Occlusive Continuant Airstreams Egressive Ingressive Ejective Implosive Nonexplosive Lingual (clicks) Linguo-pulmonic Linguo-ejective Percussive See also Articulatory phonetics Aspirated consonant No audible release Phonation Place of articulation Voice Voicelessness v t e In phonetics, a stop, also known as a plosive or oral occlusive, is a consonant in which the vocal tract is blocked so that all airflow ceases. they told me witches were scary & . ugly so I wanted to = **** witches; they told me prostitutes were ***** so I wanted to . . **** prostitutes; they weren't . . ***** at all but they can get expensive . I heard ***** . . were easy so . I wanted to . **** *****; they were too easy I didn't want to **** them after I saw them literally **** every guy they knew including me I never wanted . . anything . to w/ as more people become poets & start reading & listening to poetry everyone will realize computers can't write or speak in poetry computer s have no sense or expression computers a fad & a hoax mothers, . . daughters, . . sisters or moms but when I go out to . get laid AI is ******* psuedotechnology that's all there were what the Front Central Back Close Blank vowel trapezoid. used to call pseudoscience •iy•ɨʉ•ɯu•ɪʏ•ɪ̈ʊ̈•ɯ̽ʊ•eø•ɘɵ•ɤo•e̞ø̞•əɵ̞•ɤ̞o̞•ɛœ•ɜɞ•ʌɔ•æ•ɐɞ̞•aɶ•äɒ̈•ɑɒ Near-close Close-mid Mid Open-mid Near-open Op