plosive

[ploh-siv] /ˈploʊ sɪv/
adjective
1.
(of a stop consonant or occlusive) characterized by release in a plosion; explosive.
noun
2.
Also called explosive. a plosive speech sound.
Origin
1895-1900; shortened form of explosive
Examples from the web for plosive
  • He entered the car where the ex plosive material was stored with a lighted lantern, thinking the car only contained oil.
British Dictionary definitions for plosive

plosive

/ˈpləʊsɪv/
adjective
1.
articulated with or accompanied by plosion
noun
2.
a plosive consonant; stop
Word Origin
C20: from French, from explosifexplosive
Word Origin and History for plosive
n.

type of consonantal sound, 1899, from explosive. As an adjective from 1909.

Encyclopedia Article for plosive

in phonetics, a consonant sound characterized by the momentary blocking (occlusion) of some part of the oral cavity. A completely articulated stop usually has three stages: the catch (implosion), or beginning of the blockage; the hold (occlusion); and the release (explosion), or opening of the air passage again. A stop differs from a fricative (q.v.) in that, with a stop, occlusion is total, rather than partial. Occlusion may occur at various places in the vocal tract from the glottis to the lips; stops are thus classified as to their place of articulation-glottal, velar, palatal, alveolar, dental, bilabial, etc. In English, b and p are bilabial stops, d and t are alveolar stops, g and k are velar stops. A stop for which there is no English letter is the glottal stop, which occurs in the Scottish, Cockney, and Brooklynese pronunciation of the tt in "bottle" ("bo'l"); in other tongues (e.g., Arabic) the glottal stop has a separate mark in the script

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