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Labio-palatalization

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(Redirected fromLabial–palatal consonant)
Type of secondary articular language
Labio-palatalized
◌ᶣ
◌ʲʷ

Alabio-palatalized sound is one that is simultaneouslylabialized andpalatalized. Typically theroundedness is compressed, like[y], rather than protruded like[u]. The symbol in theInternational Phonetic Alphabet for thissecondary articulation is ⟨⟩, a superscript ⟨ɥ⟩, the symbol for thelabialized palatal approximant. If such sounds pattern with other, labialized, consonants, they may instead be transcribed as palatalized consonants plus labialization, ⟨ʷ⟩, as with the[sʲʷ] =[sᶣ] ofAbkhaz or the[nʲʷ] =[nᶣ] ofAkan.

A voiced labialized palatal approximant[ɥ] occurs inMandarin Chinese andFrench, but elsewhere is uncommon, as it is generally dependent upon the presence of frontrounded vowels such as[ø] and[y], which are themselves not common.[1] However, a labialized palatal approximant and labio-palatalized consonants appear in some languages without front rounded vowels in the Caucasus and in West Africa,[2] such as Abkhaz, and asallophones of labialized consonants before/i/, including the[tsᶣ] at the beginning of the language nameTwi. In Russian,/o/ and/u/ trigger labialization of any preceding consonant, including palatalized consonants, so thatнёс 'he carried' is phonetically[nᶣɵs].

Iaai has avoiceless labialized palatal approximant/ɥ̊/.

Languages with labio-palatalization

[edit]
  1. Abkhaz[3]
  2. Akan (Allophonic, result of labialized consonants being palatalized before front vowels)
  3. Mfumte
  4. Ndau

Labial–palatal consonants

[edit]

Truly co-articulated labial–palatal consonants such as[p͡c,b͡ɟ,m͡ɲ] are theoretically possible.[4] However, the closest sounds attested from the world's languages are thelabial–postalveolar consonants ofYélî Dnye in New Guinea, which are sometimes transcribed as labial–palatals.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Maddieson, Ian (1984).Patterns of Sounds. Cambridge Studies in Speech Science and Communication. Cambridge University Press. p. 95.ISBN 0-521-26536-3.
  2. ^Maddieson, Ian (1984).Patterns of Sounds. pp. 92, 292.
  3. ^Catford, J. C. (October 1977)."Mountain of Tongues: The Languages of the Caucasus".Annual Review of Anthropology.6 (1):283–314.doi:10.1146/annurev.an.06.100177.001435.ISSN 0084-6570.
  4. ^Howe, Darin (2003).Segmental phonology(PDF). University of Calgary. pp. 7–8.
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
Approximantβ̞ʋð̞ɹɹ̠ɻjɰʁ̞ʔ̞
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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