Question:

Which of the following sets depict/s natural class of alveolar consonants?

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Natural classes can include sounds of different manners (like fricatives and nasals) as long as they share the same place of articulation.
Updated On: Apr 26, 2025
  • / s, z, n /
  • / ipa{T}, ipa{S}, ipa{r} /
  • / n, j, t /
  • / d, t, l /
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The Correct Option is A, D

Solution and Explanation

Step 1: Define a natural class and alveolar consonants.
A natural class is a group of sounds that share common phonetic features. Alveolar consonants are produced with the tongue at or near the alveolar ridge (just behind the upper front teeth). Examples include /t, d, s, z, n, l/.

Step 2: Analyze each option.
(A) /s, z, n/ – All three are alveolar: /s/ and /z/ are fricatives, /n/ is a nasal. Despite differences in manner, they share the same place of articulation.
(B) [θ, ʃ, r] – Not all are alveolar. /θ/ is dental, /ʃ/ is postalveolar, and /r/ can be alveolar or postalveolar depending on the variety of English.
(C) /n, j, t//j/ is palatal, not alveolar.
(D) /d, t, l/ – All are alveolar: /d/ and /t/ are stops, /l/ is a lateral.

Conclusion:
Both (A) and (D) contain sets of alveolar consonants forming natural classes.
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