OK. I rechecked out my paper-version grammar book and found "l" is a voiced consonant.
I was wondering why you came up with such a question about 'semi-vowel vs consonant'. :?:
I'm more interested in finding the reason behind it. :mrgreen:
:arrow: And yes, in technical terms, /l/ in English is a voiced alveolar lateral approximant, as in
live,
life,
let,
laugh,
lack,
look,
lock. In this case, it is nicknamed 'clear l'.
:arrow: In word-final positions or after a vowel, /l/ is so 'velarised' that the root of the tongue retracts and raises to the soft palate (aka velum), in which you would pronounce this 'dark l' in such words as
cool,
rule,
cold,
aisle,
smell.
:arrow: In some environments, /l/ tends to devoice and sounds like this kind of /l/ after /s/, as we have
slow,
sled,
sleek,
slam. This is also true when /l/ is preceded by other voiceless fricatives such as /f/ and /θ/.
:arrow: Following voiceless plosives such as /k/ and /p/, this voiced approximant transforms to a voiceless fricative, when it falls on a stressed syllable. Falling on an unstressed syllable, 'clear l' is partially devoiced, similar to the case in which /l/ comes after a voiceless fricative.
I hope it could help with anything.
===Supplementary Information on Phonetic Symbols===
Allophonic members of /l/ as illustrated above:
The voiced alveolar lateral approximant is the typical [l]
Phoneme /l/ with velarisation or velarised /l/ or 'dark l' is denoted by [ɫ], called the small letter L with tilde.
Partially devoiced /l/ makes [l̥] - with a small circle under it
Fully deviced /l/ turns out to be voiceless alveolar lateral
fricative [ɬ], the symbol name of which is the small letter L with belt.
Another useful symbol is the syllabric /l/ expressed as [ɫ̩] in narrow phonetic transcription.