英:[ˈpləʊsɪv]
美:[ˈploʊsɪv]
英:[ˈpləʊsɪv]
美:[ˈploʊsɪv]
plo·sive
plo sihv
Noun
1. a consonant produced by stopping the flow of air at some point and suddenly releasing it;
"his stop consonants are too aspirated"
Adjective
1. produced by complete closure of the oral passage and subsequent release with a burst of air (as `p' and `d' in `pit' or `dog')
"由于阻塞空气通道然后突然释放而形成的辅音音," 1899年,来自 explosive。作为形容词自1909年起使用。
short for explosive
The first known use of plosive was in 1897
1 Paul Gallant, a telecommunications analyst with Concept Capital, said Obama's announcement is a plosive development for wireless infrastructure companies such as Alcatel-Lucent SA, American Tower Corp, Ciena Corp, and Tellabs Inc, among others.
2 They tend to keep their words short and tight, burning through their vowels, impatient to get to the next plosive.
3 And he knew that the point of arrival could be conveyed by stops or plosives, which are consonants in which the air flow is blocked: b, d, p, t.
4 It’s built in a sturdy way so it’s the same distance from the mic at all times and is effective at suppressing those plosives.
5 Plosive sound: It is produced by completely blocking the air stream followed by a sudden release of the compressed air in the oral cavity.
塞音:口腔中构成阻碍的两个部分完全闭塞,瞬间压迫气流冲开阻碍形成塞音。
6 An unaspirated voiceless plosive sound.
双唇送气清塞音.
7 About why the name Kramer worked best for Michael Richards’s character, she writes, “That plosive consonant K sound is known to be among the English language’s funniest phonemes.”
8 The plosive sounds - usually made with the letters P, T, K, B, D and G - had to be substituted with other consonants that didn’t require moving her lips.
9 Good Morning Heartache is mangled and mesmerising; Strange Fruit is delivered with sibilants and plosives laden with disgust.
10 An unaspirated voiceless alveolar plosive.
舌尖不送气清塞音.
11 “Pentium” began with a plosive that signified energy, power and dynamism.
12 In terms of phonemes, we notice that it does not have any plosives or fricatives, only sonorants.
13 For an instant, a wave of rage filled Richard, a plosive pure fury at his wife for not being here where she was needed.
14 In “A Note on the Word ‘Gubernatorial,’” which Davis contributed to the Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, she enjoys the word’s sound, “incorporating two voiced plosives and the word ‘goober.’”
15 He loops his breath, a sigh, a plosive exclamation and then layers vocals over the top of the track.
16 At surface level, it was a special-effects demonstration, a bonanza of texture and timbre: quavery drones, like an oscillating synthesizer; delicate ghost tones, hovering in flute range; sharp, plosive rivets of percussive airflow.
17 But it was the plosive consonants of her own language that best gave shape to her anger.
18 An unaspirated voiceless velar plosive.
舌根不送气清塞音.
19 To differentiate between the two plosives “p” and “b,” I gave the students the example of an Arab asking an American, “Can I ‘bark’ here?”
20 The QuadCast does have a built-in bright red pop filter, but unfortunately, it is not very good at stopping plosive speech sound.