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Alveolar consonant

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Consonants articulated with the tongue against or close to the superior alveolar ridge
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Alveolar
◌͇

Alveolar consonants (/ælˈvələr/ ;[1] UK also/ælviˈlər/[2]) arearticulated with the tongue against or close to the superioralveolar ridge, which is called that because it contains thealveoli (the sockets) of the upper teeth. Alveolar consonants may be articulated with the tip of the tongue (theapical consonants), as inEnglish, or with the flat of the tongue just above the tip (the "blade" of the tongue; calledlaminal consonants), as inFrench andSpanish.

TheInternational Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) does not have separate symbols for the alveolar consonants. Rather, the same symbol is used for allcoronal places of articulation that are notpalatalized like Englishpalato-alveolarsh, orretroflex. To disambiguate, thebridge ([s̪,t̪,n̪,l̪],etc.) may be used for a dental consonant, or theunder-bar ([s̠,t̠,n̠,l̠],etc.) may be used for thepostalveolars.[s̪] differs from dental[θ] in that the former is asibilant and the latter is not.[s̠] differs from postalveolar[ʃ] in being unpalatalized.

The bare letters[s,t,n,l], etc. cannot be assumed to specifically represent alveolars. The language may not make such distinctions, such that two or more coronalplaces of articulation are foundallophonically, or the transcription may simply be too broad to distinguish dental from alveolar. If it is necessary to specify a consonant as alveolar, a diacritic from theExtended IPA may be used:[s͇,t͇,n͇,l͇],etc., though that could also mean extra-retracted.[3] The letters⟨s, t, n, l⟩ are frequently called 'alveolar', and the language examples below are all alveolar sounds.

(The Extended IPA diacritic was devised forspeech pathology and is frequently used to mean "alveolarized", as in the labioalveolar sounds[p͇,b͇,m͇,f͇,v͇], where the lower lip contacts the alveolar ridge.)

In IPA

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Alveolar consonants are transcribed in the IPA as follows:

IPADescriptionExample
LanguageOrthographyIPAMeaning in English
voiceless alveolar nasalBurmese[4]နှာ[à]'nose'
nvoiced alveolar nasalEnglishrun[ɹʌn]
tvoiceless alveolar plosiveEnglishtop[tɒp]
dvoiced alveolar plosiveEnglishdebt[dɛt]
t͜svoiceless alveolar affricateGermanZeit[t͜saɪt]time
d͜zvoiced alveolar affricateItalianzainod͜zaino]backpack
svoiceless alveolar fricativeEnglishsuit[suːt]
zvoiced alveolar fricativeEnglishzoo[zuː]
t͜ɬvoiceless alveolar lateral affricateTsezэ'лI'ни[ˈʔe̞t͜ɬni]winter
d͜ɮvoiced alveolar lateral affricatePa Na[5][d͜ɮau˩˧]'deep'
ɬvoiceless alveolar lateral fricativeWelshllwyd[ɬʊɪd]grey
ɮvoiced alveolar lateral fricativeZuludlalaɮálà]to play
θ̠voiceless alveolar non-sibilant fricativeIrish EnglishItaly[ˈɪθ̠ɪli]
ð̠voiced alveolar non-sibilant fricativeScouse Englishmaid[meɪð̠]
ɹvoiced alveolar approximantEnglishred[ɹɛd]
lalveolar lateral approximantEnglishloop[lup]
ɫvelarized alveolar lateral approximantEnglishmilk[mɪɫk]
ɺ̥voiceless alveolar lateral flapKaru[ɺ̥je.ˈtɐ̃.hə͂]'that'
ɺvoiced alveolar lateral flapVenda[vuɺa]'to open'
ɾ̥voiceless alveolar flapIcelandichrafnɾ̥apn̪̊]'raven'
ɾvoiced alveolar tapEnglishbetter[ˈbɛɾɚ]
voiceless alveolar trillKonda[pui]'anthill'
rvoiced alveolar trillSpanishperro[ˈpero]'dog'
alveolar ejectiveGeorgian[ia]'tulip'
t͜sʼalveolar ejective affricateChechenцIе[t͜sʼe]'name'
alveolar ejective fricativeAmharic[ɛɡa]
t͜ɬʼalveolar lateral ejective affricateNavajotłʼóoʼdi[t͜ɬʼóːʔtɪ̀]'(at) the outside'
ɬ’alveolar lateral ejective fricativeAdygheплӀы[pɬ’ə]'four'
ƭvoiceless alveolar implosiveMamt'ut'an[ɗ̥ɯɗ̥aŋ]'finish'
ɗvoiced alveolar implosiveVietnameseđã[ɗɐː]Past tense indicator
k͡ǃq͡ǃ
ɡ͡ǃɢ͡ǃ
ŋ͡ǃɴ͡ǃ
apical alveolar clicks (many distinct consonants)Nama!oas[ᵑ̊ǃˀoas]hollow
k͡ǁq͡ǁ
ɡ͡ǁɢ͡ǁ
ŋ͡ǁɴ͡ǁ
alveolar lateral clicks (many distinct consonants)Namaǁî[ᵑ̊ǁˀĩː]discussed

Lack of alveolars

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Northwest Mekeo lacks coronal consonants entirely.[6] A few languages onBougainville Island and aroundPuget Sound, such asMakah, lack nasals and therefore[n] but have[t]. ColloquialSamoan, however, lacks both[t] and[n] but has alateral alveolar approximant/l/. (Samoan words written witht andn are pronounced with[k] and[ŋ] in colloquial speech.) In StandardHawaiian,[t] is an allophone of/k/, but/l/ and/n/ exist.

Labioalveolar consonants

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In labioalveolars, the lower lip contacts the alveolar ridge. Such sounds are typically the result of a severe overbite. In theExtensions to the IPA for disordered speech, they are transcribed with the alveolar diacritic on labial letters: ⟨⟩.

See also

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References

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  1. ^"alveolar".Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription orparticipating institution membership required.)
    "alveolar".Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary. Merriam-Webster.
  2. ^"ALVEOLAR | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary".Cambridge Dictionary.
    "alveolar".Collins English Dictionary.HarperCollins.
  3. ^E.g. in Laver (1994)Principles of Phonetics, p. 559–560
  4. ^Ladefoged & Maddieson (1996), p. 111.
  5. ^Chen, Qiguang [陈其光]. 2001. "A Brief Introduction of Bana Language [巴那语概况]". Minzu Yuwen.
  6. ^Blevins, Juliette (2009)."Another Universal Bites the Dust: Northwest Mekeo Lacks Coronal Phonemes"(PDF).Oceanic Linguistics.48 (1):264–273.doi:10.1353/ol.0.0033.ISSN 1527-9421. Retrieved2025-07-07.

Further reading

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Articulation
Place
Labial
Coronal
Active place
Dorsal
Laryngeal
Double articulation
Pathological
Other
Manner
Obstruent
Sonorant
Airstream
Secondary
articulation
Tongue shape
Voice
Phonation
IPA topics
IPA
Special topics
Encodings
Pulmonic consonants
PlaceLabialCoronalDorsalLaryngeal
MannerBi­labialLabio­dentalLinguo­labialDentalAlveolarPost­alveolarRetro­flexPalatalVelarUvularPharyn­geal/epi­glottalGlottal
Nasalmɱ̊ɱn̪̊nn̠̊ɳ̊ɳɲ̊ɲŋ̊ŋɴ̥ɴ
Plosivepbtdʈɖcɟkɡqɢʡʔ
Sibilantaffricatet̪s̪d̪z̪tsdzt̠ʃd̠ʒ
Non-sibilant affricatep̪fb̪vt̪θd̪ðtɹ̝̊dɹ̝t̠ɹ̠̊˔d̠ɹ̠˔ɟʝkxɡɣɢʁʡʜʡʢʔh
Sibilantfricativeszʃʒʂʐɕʑ
Non-sibilant fricativeɸβfvθ̼ð̼θðθ̠ð̠ɹ̠̊˔ɹ̠˔ɻ̊˔ɻ˔çʝxɣχʁħʕhɦ
Approximantβ̞ʋð̞ɹɹ̠ɻjɰ˷
Tap/flapⱱ̟ɾ̼ɾ̥ɾɽ̊ɽɢ̆ʡ̮
Trillʙ̥ʙrɽ̊r̥ɽrʀ̥ʀʜʢ
Lateral affricatetꞎd𝼅c𝼆ɟʎ̝k𝼄ɡʟ̝
Lateral fricativeɬ̪ɬɮ𝼅𝼆ʎ̝𝼄ʟ̝
Lateral approximantlɭ̊ɭʎ̥ʎʟ̥ʟʟ̠
Lateral tap/flapɺ̥ɺ𝼈̊𝼈ʎ̮ʟ̆

Symbols to the right in a cell arevoiced, to the left arevoiceless.Shaded areas denote articulations judged impossible.

Other
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