What is phonetic feature?
When we describe segment in terms of places of articulation, manners of articulation, voicing, position of the tongue, height of the tongue, lip-rounding and tensity, we actually analyze speech sounds into their composing elements or phonetic features.
[g] possesses the features [+voiced] [+velar] [+stop]. There are other segments that possess one of the three features, but none that possessed all three. Those features are called phonetic features.
Classes of sounds that share a feature or features are called natural classes. The feature [+round] is shared by [uː], [u], [ɔː], [ɔ].
Features form a hierarchy. Some features specify a small class. E.g.
[+anterior] defines labiodentals, interdentals and alveolars, namely, [p], [b], [m], [f], [v], [θ], [ð], [t], [d], [l], [r], [n].
[+continuant] specifies all the fricatives, liquids and glides.
[+sibilant] (also called [+strident]) is a feature found in [s], [z], [ʃ], [ʒ] [tʃ],[ dʒ].
[+syllabic] is a feature that represents all the vowels and [m], [n], [l].
[+sonorant] is a major class feature. It is shared by all the vowels, nasals, liquids and glides.
Major class features can specify segments across the consonant-vowel boundary. Classification of segments by features is the basis on which variations of sounds can be analyzed.