Jump to content

Voiced alveolar lateral affricate

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 24.35.19.84 (talk) at 20:45, 24 November 2020 (→‎Voiced alveolar lateral affricate). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Voiced alveolar lateral affricate
λ
IPA Number104 (149)
Audio sample
Encoding
Entity (decimal)d​͡​ɮ
Unicode (hex)U+0064 U+0361 U+026E
X-SAMPAdK\
Voiced dental lateral affricate
d̪ɮ̪
IPA Number103 (148)
Encoding
X-SAMPAd_dK\_d

The voiced alveolar lateral affricate is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet is ⟨d͡ɮ⟩ (often simplified to ⟨⟩).

Features

Features of the voiced alveolar lateral affricate:

Occurrence

Voiced alveolar lateral affricates are rare. Sandawe has been transcribed with [dɮ], but the sound is more post-alveolar or palatal than alveolar. Consonants written dl in Athabaskan and Wakashan languages are either tenuis affricates, [t͜ɬ] (perhaps slightly voiced allophonically), or have an approximant release, [tˡ] or [dˡ]. In Montana Salish, /l/ may be prestopped, depending on context, in which case it may be realized as [ᵈl] or as an affricate [ᵈɮ̤].[1] In the Nguni languages [d͡ɮ] occurs after nasals: /nɮ̤/ is pronounced [nd͡ɮ̤], with an epenthetic stop, in at least Xhosa[2] and Zulu.[3]

Language Word IPA Meaning Notes
Montana Salish p̓əllič̓č [pʼəd͡ɮɮít͡ʃʼt͡ʃ] 'turned over' Positional allophone of /l/
Xhosa indlovu [ind͡ɮ̤ɔːv̤u][missing tone] 'elephant' Allophone of /ɮ̤/ after /n/

References

  1. ^ Flemming, Ladefoged & Thomason (1994) "Phonetic structures of Montana Salish", UCLA Working Papers in Phonetics 87: 7
  2. ^ Scarraffiotti (2011) Parlons Xhosa p. 13
  3. ^ Rycroft & Ngcobo (1979) Say it in Zulu, p. 6

External links