Start practicing!
K
The K sound is a voiceless velar stop consonant. It is made by pressing the back of your tongue against the soft palate (velum) and releasing it with a puff of air.
Press the back of your tongue against your soft palate (the soft part at the back of the roof of your mouth). Build up air pressure, then release it with a small puff of air. Your vocal cords should not vibrate.
Articulation video not available
Watch the Sound
Click the video to watch in fullscreen mode
Example Words
/ki//kæt//kip//meɪk//laɪk//wɜrk//bʊk/Pronunciation Practice
Speak the words aloud to get instant feedback on your pronunciation
Quick Practice
3-5 essential words
Full Practice
All 8 words
Minimal Pairs
Listen and compare similar sounds
/kæp//gæp//bæk//bæg//koʊld//goʊld/Tongue Twister
Love these free pronunciation tools?
❤️ DonatePractice and related guides
Use the hub pages below to reinforce this sound with drills and deeper explanations.
Sound Hub
Study the English consonant system
Compare voicing, place of articulation, and the trickiest consonant contrasts.
Practice
Practice English consonants
Drill consonant contrast, articulation, and common listening confusions.
Pronunciation
Double Consonants and Short Vowels: The Spelling Pattern That Unlocks English Pronunciation
Discover how double consonant letters signal short vowel sounds in English. Learn why 'dinner' and 'diner' sound completely different, and master this essential rule to pronounce hundreds of words correctly.
Pronunciation
Final Voiced Consonants: Why Spanish Speakers Say 'Dock' Instead of 'Dog'
Spanish speakers often devoice final consonants, turning 'dog' into 'dock' and 'cab' into 'cap'. Learn to maintain voicing at the end of words for clearer English pronunciation.