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semivowel
[ sem-ee-vou-uhl ]
noun
- Phonetics. a speech sound of vowel quality used as a consonant, as (w) in wet or (y) in yet.
semivowel
/ ˈsɛmɪˌvaʊəl /
noun
- a vowel-like sound that acts like a consonant, in that it serves the same function in a syllable carrying the same amount of prominence as a consonant relative to a true vowel, the nucleus of the syllable. In English and many other languages the chief semivowels are (w) in well and (j), represented as y, in yell
- a frictionless continuant classified as one of the liquids; (l) or (r)
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Word History and Origins
Origin of semivowel1
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Example Sentences
The orthography also, in its more sparing use of the semivowels to indicate the vowels u and i, resembles that of the Bible.
From Project Gutenberg
In these words the i represents the semivowel y, into which the original g was changed.
From Project Gutenberg
All other consonants are semivowels, and are pronounced with a continuous sound.
From Project Gutenberg
Four of the semivowels,—l, m, n, and r,—are termed liquids, on account of the fluency of their sounds; and four others,—v, w, y, and z,—are likewise more vocal than the aspirates.
From Project Gutenberg
U and V are now, however, differentiated, U being used only as a vowel or semivowel, and V only as a consonant.
From Project Gutenberg
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