Palato-alveolars are consonants that are made by touching the tip of the tongue to the alveolar ridge and the middle of the tongue to the hard palate. The palato-alveolar sounds in English are /tʃ/ and /dʒ/. /tʃ/: This is the sound you make when you say "church." /dʒ/: This is the sound you make when you say "judge." Here are some examples of words that contain palato-alveolar sounds: church judge chip jump chat jazz
This group of sound consists from the following sounds: ʃ, zh, tʃ, j