Dictionary Only:
Profanity Off:

Sentences with BILABIAL

Check out our example sentences below to help you understand the context.

Sentences

1
"The bilabial consonant /p/ is produced by pressing the upper and lower lips together."
2
"In English, the word 'ball' starts with a bilabial sound."
3
"The /m/ sound in 'mother' is a bilabial nasal."
4
"Babies often start with bilabial sounds like /b/ and /p/."
5
"Some languages have many bilabial sounds, while others have none."
6
"The bilabial trill is a rare sound found in some African languages."
7
"The bilabial click is a speech sound used in various languages like Xhosa and Zulu."
8
"Articulating bilabial sounds requires the use of both lips."
9
"The bilabial fricative /ɸ/ is found in some Japanese dialects."
10
"Linguists study the articulation and characteristics of bilabial sounds."
1
"The sounds /p/, /b/, and /m/ are examples of bilabial consonants."
2
"In English, the word 'pat' starts with a bilabial sound."
3
"Some languages, such as Hindi, have a bilabial trill /ʙ/."
4
"Infants typically develop bilabial sounds before other speech sounds."
5
"The lip rounding in the bilabial sounds distinguishes them from other consonants."
6
"In phonetics, the bilabial place of articulation is important to study."
7
"The English word 'bomb' contains two bilabial consonants."
8
"Many indigenous Australian languages have a series of bilabial consonants."
9
"The bilabial click is a speech sound found in some African languages."
10
"The International Phonetic Alphabet represents the bilabial approximant as /β/."
11
"In some dialects, the bilabial sounds /p/ and /b/ are pronounced without aspiration."
12
"The term 'bilabial' is derived from the Latin words for 'two' and 'lips'."
13
"The bilabial nasal /m/ appears in many different languages around the world."
14
"Some languages have contrastive bilabial and labiodental fricatives."
15
"Babies often produce only bilabial sounds, like /m/ and /p/, in their early babbling."
1
"The sounds /p/, /b/, and /m/ are examples of bilabials in English."
2
"The term 'bilabial' is derived from the Latin words 'bi' meaning two and 'labium' meaning lip."
3
"In phonetics, bilabials are consonant sounds produced by bringing both lips together."
4
"The /w/ sound in English is sometimes classified as a labiovelar, which is a combination of a bilabial and velar sound."
5
"The word 'mom' has two bilabial sounds in a row."
6
"In sign language, the sign for 'p' is created with a bilabial movement."
7
"Infants tend to produce bilabial sounds such as /p/ and /b/ before other consonant sounds."
8
"Babies often babble with bilabial sounds like 'ba' and 'pa'."
9
"Lip-reading relies heavily on identifying bilabial movements and shapes of the lips."
WordDB Icon
WordDB
United Kingdom
Download the WordDB app directly on your home screen for instant access. No App Store necessary, less than 1MB storage, always up-to-date and secure.
1.
Tap on share button
2.
Tap on Add To Home Screenadd button
3.
Find WordDB App Icon on your home screen