| Voiced labial–alveolar plosive | |
|---|---|
| d͡b | |
| d̪͡b |
Avoiced labial–alveolar plosive is a type ofconsonantal sound used in somespoken languages. It is a[d] and[b] pronounced simultaneously. The symbol in theInternational Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is ⟨d͡b⟩.
Features of a voiced labial–alveolar plosive are:
| Language | Dialect | Word | IPA | Meaning | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abkhaz[1][2] | [example needed] | Endolabial, unlike a [p]. In free variation with[dʷ]; contrasts[t͡pʷʰ],[d͡bʷ],[t͡pʷʼ]. SeeAbkhaz phonology. | |||
| Lak[2] | Some dialects | [example needed] | Endolabial, unlike a [p]. Contrasts[t͡pʷ],[d͡bʷ],[t͡pʷʼ]. | ||
| Nzema[3] | mgbi | [n͜md͜bɪ̃] | 'stoic' | an allophone of/ɡ͡b/ before front vowels. | |
| Yele[4] | Mb꞉eetpuwo | [mbɛ̃ːd̪͡buw̪ɔ] | (place name) | Voiced between vowels. Contrastsvoiced labial–retroflex plosive. | |
| Kmatpi | [k͡pŋ͡mæd̪͡bi] | (a male name) | |||