| Voiced dental non-sibilant affricate | |
|---|---|
| dð | |
| d̪ð | |
| Audio sample | |
Avoiced dental non-sibilant affricate is a type ofconsonantal sound used in somespokenlanguages. The symbols in theInternational Phonetic Alphabet that represent this sound are ⟨d͡ð⟩, ⟨d͜ð⟩, ⟨d̪͡ð⟩, and ⟨d̟͡ð⟩.
The sound is a frequent allophone of/ð/.[citation needed]
Features of a voiced dental non-sibilant affricate:
| Language | Word | IPA | Meaning | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Burmese[1] | အညာသား | [ʔəɲàd̪͡ðá] | 'grand' | Common realization of/ð/.[1] | |
| English | Dublin[2] | they | [d̪͡ðeɪ̯] | 'they' | Corresponds to[ð] in other dialects; may be[d̪] instead.[2] |
| New York[3] | Corresponds to[ð] in other dialects, may be a stop[d̪] or a fricative[ð] instead.[3][4] | ||||
| Cajun[4] | |||||
| New Zealand[5] | [d̪͡ðæe̯] | Possible realization of/ð/.[5] SeeNew Zealand English phonology | |||