How to say "yellow" in Cebuano
Side view / Front view of mouth & tongue animation
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Articulatory Animation Breakdown
Articulation: Tongue tip presses against the alveolar ridge. Lips are neutral. Jaw is nearly closed. Voicing is continuous. Air pressure builds and releases in a voiced burst.
Transition: The tongue tip drops and the jaw opens wide to transition into the open /a/ vowel.
Role in phrase: As part of the nuclear-accented syllable, this consonant is articulated very firmly with a crisp, clear release to anchor the phrase's intonation.
Articulation: Lips are unrounded and neutral. Tongue body is low and central, resting flat. Tongue tip rests behind the lower front teeth. Jaw is fully open. Airflow is continuous and voiced.
Transition: The jaw closes slightly as the tongue tip shoots up to contact the alveolar ridge for /l/.
Role in phrase: This syllable carries the nuclear accent (the strongest stress in the phrase) — the jaw opens wider, duration extends significantly, and the tongue position is held longer with maximal precision.
Articulation: Tongue tip touches the alveolar ridge, while the sides of the tongue drop to let air flow freely laterally. Lips are neutral. Jaw is slightly open. Voicing is continuous.
Transition: The tongue tip drops and the jaw opens wide to transition into the open /a/ vowel.
Role in phrase: This consonant is articulated naturally without extra emphasis, moving quickly into the next sound.
Articulation: Lips are unrounded and neutral. Tongue body is low and central, resting flat. Tongue tip rests behind the lower front teeth. Jaw is fully open. Airflow is continuous and voiced.
Transition: The tongue body pulls back and up against the soft palate to seal the airflow for /ɡ/.
Role in phrase: This vowel is unstressed and brief — it functions as a fast glide into the rest of the word.
Articulation: Tongue back rises to press against the soft palate (velum). Lips are neutral. Jaw is slightly open. Voicing is continuous. Air pressure builds and releases in a voiced burst.
Transition: The vocal tract relaxes as voicing ends, returning to a neutral resting position.
Role in phrase: This consonant is articulated naturally without extra emphasis, moving quickly into the next sound.
Articulation descriptions are based on established phonetic properties of each IPA segment, cross-referenced against native Cebuano speaker recordings. Tongue position, jaw height, lip rounding, and airflow direction reflect standard phonetic descriptions for these sounds as they appear in Cebuano speech.
IPA & Pronunciation of "dalag"
This audio was produced using professional-grade speech synthesis calibrated to Cebuano phonology. Pronunciation accuracy — including stress placement, vowel quality, and natural rhythm — was reviewed against native Cebuano (Bisaya) speaker recordings. Playback at 0.5× speed is recommended for detailed study.
Acoustic Speech Visualization
| Syllable / Phoneme | Timing | Notes |
|---|---|---|
//da/·/laɡ// | 0.00–0.64s | 2 syllables, 5 phonemes |
/da/ | 0.00–0.16s | Voiced sequence — intensity rises to ~79 dB at the nucleus; pitch climbs to ~123 Hz on the vowel driven by stress, with strengthened spectral presence across /ˈda/ |
/laɡ/ | 0.16–0.64s | Voiced sequence — muted vocal projection (~80 dB) through the cluster; F0 low and level at ~115 Hz on the vowel with reduced resonance spread, characteristic of unstressed /·laɡ/ |
Syllable boundary positions and segment widths in this visualization are derived from durational measurements taken from native Cebuano speaker recordings, not estimated. Timing ratios reflect actual phonetic data. Learn how we build our acoustic pronunciation visualizations →
Syllabic Stress Visualization
Syllable stress pattern and pitch contour derived from acoustic measurements of native Cebuano speech. Dot size reflects relative duration and prominence; the curve shows how fundamental frequency (F0) moves across syllables in natural Bisaya pronunciation.
Native Speakers Pronounce: dalag
The video above features a native Cebuano (Bisaya) speaker for real-world pronunciation reference. Comparing your production against a native speaker is one of the most effective ways to refine accuracy in stress, vowel quality, and natural speech rhythm. Video sourced from the @LearningBisaya YouTube channel.
Editorial Notes
How this pronunciation entry was made
- Pronunciation audio generated via professional speech synthesis, then calibrated against native Cebuano speaker recordings.
- IPA transcription derived from acoustic/phonetic analysis, not transliteration
- Articulatory descriptions cross-checked against Cebuano phonology documentation
- Reviewed by a language learning advisor before publishing
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Native speaker reference