| Voiceless labial–alveolar plosive | |
|---|---|
| t͡p | |
| t̪͡p |
Avoiceless labial–alveolar plosive is a type ofconsonantal sound used in somespoken languages. It is a[t] and[p] pronounced simultaneously. The symbol in theInternational Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is⟨t͡p⟩.
Features of a voiceless labial–alveolar plosive are:
| Language | Dialect | Word | IPA | Meaning | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abkhaz[1][2] | [example needed] | Endolabial, unlike a [p]. In free variation with[tʰʷ]; contrasts[t͡pʷʰ],[d͡bʷ],[t͡pʷʼ]. SeeAbkhaz phonology. | |||
| Lak[2] | Some dialects | [example needed] | Endolabial, unlike a [p].Contrasts[t͡pʷ],[d͡bʷ],[t͡pʷʼ]. | ||
| Nzema[3] | pi | [t͡piʔ] | 'to become thick' | an allophone of/k͡p/ before front vowels. | |
| Yele[4] | tpili | [t̪͡pili] | 'sea' (women's term) | Contrastsvoiceless labial–retroflex plosive. | |
| tp꞉ee | [t̪͡pɛ̃ː] | 'child' | |||