There is an intermediate type called
sonants (sonorants). They have features common to both vowels and consonants. A consonant is characterized
by an obstruction, however, the air passage is wide. In producing sonorants voice prevails over noise. Some English sonorants [l] [m] [n] can form a syllable when they are preceded by a consonant and if no vowel sound follows,
e. g. people [pi-pl], seldom [sel-dm], taken [tei-kn]
The phoneme is the smallest language unit that exists in speech as such speech sound which is capable of distinguishing one word from another word, or one grammatical form of a word from another grammatical form of the same word.