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The egressive case marks the beginning of a movement or a moment in time.
The majority of sounds in most languages, such as vowels, are both pulmonic and egressive.
Pulmonic egressive sounds are found in all spoken languages.
The initiative case denotes the starting point of an action but shouldn't be confused with the egressive case.
There are seven or eight known releases, not counting slapped or egressive clicks.
Pulmonic egressive sounds are those in which the air stream is created by the lungs, ribs, and diaphragm.
Moreover, the amplitude was louder in the egressive phases in four cheetahs.
In strict, technical terms, ejectives are glottalic egressive consonants.
Glottalic egressive sounds are known as ejectives.
The egressive consonants found in word-initial (C1) position in lexical words are as follows.
Likewise, ingressive phases had a lower frequency than egressive phases in all four cheetahs.
The opposite of an egressive sound is an ingressive sound, by which the airstream flows inward through the mouth or nose.
Similarly, voiced clicks require a simultaneous pulmonic egressive airstream to make the voicing possible.
In human speech, egressive sounds are sounds by which the air stream is created by pushing air out through the mouth or nose.
So-called glottalized vowels and other sonorants use the more common pulmonic egressive airstream mechanism.
This nasal airflow may itself be egressive or ingressive, independently of the lingual initiation of the click.
This term is generally applied to the implosive consonants, which actually use a mixed glottalic ingressive-pulmonic egressive airstream.
These changes in pressure often correspond to outward and inward airflow, and are therefore termed egressive and ingressive.
The locative cases are usually only used with inanimate references with the exception of the terminative, approximative and egressive cases.
Glottalic consonant (ingressive, egressive)
As in the singular, possessive suffixes follow the instrumental, inessive, illative, elative, egressive, terminative and prolative cases.
Even some of the pulmonic egressive consonants are exotic for the Australian context: fricatives, voiceless nasals, and bilabial trills.
In phonetics, ejective consonants are usually voiceless consonants that are pronounced with a glottalic egressive airstream.
A characteristic of purring is that it is realized on both egressive and ingressive airstream, as seen and heard on online video and audio.
Most languages have exclusively pulmonic egressive consonants, which use the lungs and diaphragm, but ejectives, clicks, and implosives use different mechanisms.