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Answer for the clue "Don't drop one's aitches like Captain ’Ook, for example ", 8 letters:
aspirate

Alternative clues for the word aspirate

Word definitions for aspirate in dictionaries

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. a consonant pronounced with aspiration v. remove as if by suction; "draw in air" [syn: draw in , suck in ] pronounce with aspiration; of stop sounds suck in air

Usage examples of aspirate.

My eyes fly open and I aspirate in the jawless equivalent of a scream.

The waiters shared their pleasant mood, and served them affectionately, and were now and then invited to join in the gay talk which babbled on over dislocated aspirates, and filled the air with a sentiment of vagabond enjoyment, of the romantic freedom of violated convention, of something Gil Blas-like, almost picaresque.

Guadalaxara, or Guadalajara, is pronounced by the Spaniards with a strong aspirate, the x and j having the same force.

Aspirates troubled him, so that for the most part he cast them away, and the syntax of his periods was often anacoluthic.

Matty's Da'd died choking on aspirated blood, a veritable fountain of the darkest possible blood, Matty coated a spray-paint-russet as he held the man's yellow wrists and Mum lumbered off down the ward in search of a crash-cart team.

Particles aspirated so terribly fine, like almost atomized, so that they hung in the air like the air itself over the cribbed bed as the man expired, cat-yellow eyes wide open and face screwed into the very most godawful rictusized grin of pain, his last thoughts (if any) unknowable.

Gately's eyes were rolling around in his head and he was making pathetic little scared aspirated sounds as he pictured himself with a hook and parrot and patch making piratical 'Arr Matey' sounds from the AA podium.

On top of the bullet wound, he aspirated a lot of blood and they had to insert a chest tube.

From the autopsy she already knew the patient’s lungs and bronchial tubes had been clear, meaning he had not aspirated anything.

The question of aspiration There is one uncertainty regarding the precise pronunciation the unvoiced stops c (= k), t, p: In English as well as some other languages, these sounds, when occurring before a vowel at the beginning of a word, are normally aspirated.

Should Quenya t, p, c be aspirated as in English, or should they be pronounced as in French or Finnish?

It may be observed that Quenya t, p, c descend from Primitive Elvish consonants that were certainly not aspirated, for in the primitive language they contrasted with distinct aspirated sounds: primitive th, ph, kh, which later became s, f, h in Quenya.

Since the primitive aspirated sounds had been changed, adding aspiration to t, p, c would cause no confusion.

It should be noted, though, that in the writing system devised by Fëanor, there were originally distinct letters for aspirated sounds: "The original Fëanorian system also possessed a grade with extended stems, both above and below the line [of writing].

The voiced counterparts of t, p and c/k, namely d, b and (hard) g respectively, are not aspirated in English.