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Postalveolar consonant

Postalveolar or post-alveolar consonants are consonants articulated with the tongue near or touching the back of the alveolar ridge. Articulation is farther back in the mouth than the alveolar consonants, which are at the ridge itself, but not as far back as the hard palate, the place of articulation for palatal consonants. Examples of postalveolar consonants are the English palato-alveolar consonants [ʃ] [tʃ] [ʒ] [dʒ], as in the words "ship", "'chill", "vision", and "jump", respectively.

There are many types of postalveolar sounds—especially among the sibilants. The three primary types are palato-alveolar (such as [ʃ ʒ], weakly palatalized), alveolo-palatal (such as [ɕ ʑ], strongly palatalized), and retroflex (such as [ʂ ʐ], unpalatalized). The palato-alveolar and alveolo-palatal subtypes are commonly counted as "palatals" in phonology since they rarely contrast with true palatal consonants.

Postalveolar sibilants

For most sounds involving the tongue, the place of articulation can be sufficiently identified just by specifying the point of contact on the upper part of the mouth (for example, velar consonants involve contact on the soft palate and dental consonants involve the teeth), along with any secondary articulation such as palatalization (raising of the tongue body) or labialization (lip rounding).

However, among sibilants, particularly postalveolar sibilants, there are slight differences in the shape of the tongue and the point of contact on the tongue itself, which correspond to large differences in the resulting sound. For example, the alveolar fricative [s] and the three postalveolar fricatives [ɕ ʃ ʂ] differ noticeably both in pitch and sharpness; the order [s ɕ ʃ ʂ] corresponds to progressively lower-pitched and duller (less "hissy" or piercing) sounds. ([s] is the highest-pitched and most piercing, which is the reason that hissing sounds like "Sssst!" or "Psssst!" are typically used to attract someone's attention). As a result, it is necessary to specify many additional subtypes.

Tongue shape

The main distinction is the shape of the tongue, which corresponds to differing degrees of palatalization (raising of the body of the tongue). From least to most palatalized, they are retroflex (such as [ʂ ʐ], unpalatalized); palato-alveolar (such as [ʃ ʒ], weakly palatalized); and alveolo-palatal (such as [ɕ ʑ], strongly palatalized). The increasing palatalization corresponds to progressively higher-pitched and sharper-sounding consonants.

Less technically, the retroflex consonant [ʂ] sounds somewhat like a mixture between the regular English [ʃ] of "ship" and the "h" at the beginning of "heard", especially when it is pronounced forcefully and with a strong American "r". The alveolo-palatal consonant [ɕ] sounds like a strongly palatalized version of [ʃ], somewhat like "nourish you".

Palato-alveolar sounds are normally described as having a convex (a bunched-up or domed) tongue. The front, central part of the tongue is somewhat raised compared to the tip, back and sides, which gives it a weak palatalization. For retroflex sounds, the tongue shape is either concave (usually when apical or subapical, made with the tip of the tongue) or flat (usually when laminal, made with the area behind the tongue tip). For alveolo-palatal sounds, the front half of the tongue is flat and raised so that it closely parallels the upper surface of the mouth, from the teeth to the hard palate. Behind that is a sudden convex bend.

The following table shows the three types of postalveolar sibilant fricatives defined in the IPA:

IPA transcription of postalveolar sibilants
Voiceless Voiced
IPA Description Example IPA Description Example
Language Orthography IPA Meaning Language Orthography IPA Meaning
  Voiceless palato-alveolar sibilant English shin [ʃɪn] shin   Voiced palato-alveolar sibilant English vision [vɪʒən] vision
  Voiceless alveolo-palatal sibilant Mandarin 小 (xiǎo) [ɕiɑu˨˩˦] small   Voiced alveolo-palatal sibilant Polish zioło [ʑɔwɔ] herb
  voiceless retroflex sibilant Mandarin 上海 (Shànghǎi) [ʂɑ̂ŋ.xàɪ] Shanghai   voiced retroflex sibilant Russian
Polish
жаба (žaba)

żaba

[ʐabə]

[ʐaba]

toad
frog

Point of tongue contact (laminal, apical, subapical)

A second variable is whether the contact occurs with the very tip of the tongue (an apical articulation [ʃ̺]), with the surface just above the tip, the blade of the tongue (a laminal articulation [ʃ̻]), or with the underside of the tip (a subapical articulation). Apical and subapical articulations are always "tongue-up", with the tip of the tongue above the teeth, and laminal articulations are often "tongue-down", with the tip of the tongue behind the lower teeth.

The upward curvature of the tongue tip to make apical or subapical contact renders palatalization more difficult so domed (palato-alveolar) consonants are not attested with subapical articulation and fully palatalized (such as alveolo-palatal) sounds occur only with laminal articulation. Also, the apical-laminal distinction among palato-alveolar sounds makes little (although presumably non-zero[1]) perceptible difference; both articulations, in fact, occur among English-speakers.[2]

As a result, the differing points of tongue contact (laminal, apical and subapical) are significant largely for retroflex sounds. Retroflex sounds can also occur outside of the postalveolar region, ranging from as far back as the hard palate to as far forward as the alveolar region behind the teeth. Subapical retroflex sounds are often palatal (and vice versa), which occur particularly in the Dravidian languages.

Position of tongue tip (laminal "closed")

There is an additional distinction that can be made among tongue-down laminal sounds, depending on exactly where behind the lower teeth the tongue tip is placed. A bit behind the lower teeth is a hollow area (or pit) in the lower surface of the mouth. When the tongue tip rests in the hollowed area, there is an empty space below the tongue (a sublingual cavity), which results in a relatively more "hushing" sound. When the tip of the tongue rests against the lower teeth, there is no sublingual cavity, resulting in a more "hissing" sound. Generally, the tongue-down postalveolar consonants have the tongue tip on the hollowed area (with a sublingual cavity), whereas for the tongue-down alveolar consonants, the tongue tip rests against the teeth (no sublingual cavity), which accentuates the hissing vs. hushing distinction of these sounds.

However, the palato-alveolar sibilants in Northwest Caucasian languages such as the extinct Ubykh have the tongue tip resting directly against the lower teeth rather than in the hollowed area. Ladefoged and Maddieson[3] term it a "closed laminal postalveolar" articulation, which gives the sounds a quality that Catford describes as "hissing-hushing" sounds. Catford transcribes them as ŝ, ẑ (that is not IPA notation; the obsolete IPA letters ʆ, ʓ have occasionally been resurrected for these sounds).

A laminal "closed" articulation could also be made with alveolo-palatal sibilants and a laminal "non-closed" articulation with alveolar sibilants, but no language appears to do so. In addition, no language seems to have a minimal contrast between two sounds based only on the "closed"/"non-closed" variation, with no concomitant articulatory distinctions (for all languages, including the Northwest Caucasian languages, if the language has two laminal sibilants, one of which is "closed" and the other is "non-closed", they will also differ in some other ways).

Examples

A few languages distinguish three different postalveolar sibilant tongue shapes (/ʂ/ /ʃ/ /ɕ/) such as the Sino-Tibetan Northern Qiang and Southern Qiang, which make such a distinction among affricates (but only a two-way distinction among fricatives) and the Northwest Caucasian languages Ubykh (now extinct) and Abkhaz. More common are languages such as Mandarin Chinese and Polish, which distinguish two postalveolar sibilants, typically /ʂ/ /ɕ/ since they are maximally distinct.

The attested possibilities, with exemplar languages, are as follows. IPA diacritics are simplified, and some articulations would require two diacritics to be fully specified, but only one is used to keep the results legible without the need for OpenType IPA fonts. Also, Peter Ladefoged, whose notation is used here, has resurrected an obsolete IPA symbol, the under dot, to indicate the apical postalveolar, which is normally included in the category of retroflex consonants. The notation s̠, ṣ is sometimes reversed, and either may also be called 'retroflex' and written ʂ.

IPA Place of articulation Exemplifying languages
[s̠ z̠] laminal flat postalveolar (laminal retroflex) Polish sz, rz, cz, dż, Mandarin sh, zh, ch
[ṣ ẓ] apical postalveolar (apical retroflex) Ubykh, Toda
[ʃ ʒ] domed postalveolar (palato-alveolar) English sh, zh (may be either laminal or apical)
[ʃ̻ ʒ̻] laminal domed postalveolar Toda
[ɕ ʑ] laminal palatalized postalveolar (alveolo-palatal) Mandarin q, j, x, Polish ć, ś, ź, dź, Ubykh
[ŝ ẑ] laminal closed postalveolar Ubykh
[ʂ ʐ] subapical postalveolar or palatal (subapical retroflex) Toda

Postalveolar non-sibilants

Non-sibilant sounds can also be made in the postalveolar region, the number of acoustically distinct variations is then significantly reduced. The primary distinction for such sounds is between laminal palatalized and apical retroflex non-palatalized. (Subapical retroflex non-sibilants also occur but tend to be palatal, as for sibilants.)

Non-palatalized (retroflex)

Retroflex stops, nasals and laterals (like [ʈ ɳ ɭ]) occur in a number of languages across the world such as in South Asian languages such as Hindi and various East Asian languages such as Vietnamese. The sounds are fairly rare in European languages but occur, for example, in Swedish; they are then often considered to be allophones of sequences such as /rn/ or /rt/. Also, for some languages that distinguish "dental" vs. "alveolar" stops and nasals, they are actually articulated nearer to prealveolar and postalveolar, respectively.

The normal rhotic consonant (r-sound) in American English is a retroflex approximant [ɻ] (the equivalent in British English is an alveolar approximant [ɹ]). Retroflex rhotics of various sorts, especially approximants and flaps occur commonly in the world's languages. Some languages also have retroflex trills. Tamil and Malayalam have two trills, at least for many speakers, [r̟] vs. [r̠], the latter of which being retroflex. Toda is particularly unusual in that it has six trills, including a palatalized/non-palatalized distinction and a three-way place distinction among dental, alveolar and retroflex trills.

Palatalized

Palatalized postalveolar non-sibilants are usually considered to be alveolo-palatal. Some non-sibilant sounds in some languages are said to be palato-alveolar rather than alveolo-palatal, but in practice, it is unclear if there is any consistent acoustic distinction between the two types of sounds.

In phonological descriptions, alveolo-palatal postalveolar non-sibilants are usually not distinguished as such but are considered to be variants of either palatal non-sibilants (such as [c ɲ ʎ] or of palatalized alveolar non-sibilants (such as [tʲ nʲ lʲ]). Even the two types are often not distinguished among nasals and laterals, as almost all languages have only one palatalized/palatal nasal or lateral in their phonemic inventories. For example, the sound described as a "palatal lateral" in various Romance languages and often indicated as /ʎ/ is most often alveolo-palatal [ḻʲ] (like in Catalan and Italian) and sometimes a palatalized alveolar [lʲ], such as in some northern Brazilian Portuguese dialects.

The IPA does not have specific symbols for alveolo-palatal non-sibilants, but they can be denoted using the advanced diacritic like c̟ ɲ̟ ʎ̟. Sinologists often use special symbols for alveolo-palatal non-sibilants, ȶ ȵ ȴ, created by analogy with the curls used to mark alveolo-palatal sibilants. However, the actual sounds indicated using these symbols are often palatal or palatalized alveolar rather than alveolo-palatal, like the variation for symbols like [ɲ ʎ]. The decision to use the special alveolo-palatal symbols in sinology is largely based on distributional similarities between the sounds in question and the alveolo-palatal sibilants, which are prominent in many East Asian languages.

However, a few languages distinguish alveolo-palatal sounds from other palatalized non-sibilants in the dental-to-palatal region. Many conservative dialects of Irish in fact have a three-way distinction among palatalized nasals between dorsal palatal [ɲ], laminal alveolo-palatal [ṉʲ], and apical palatalized alveolar [nʲ]. That is typical with oppositions among similar sounds in a single language, the sounds being maximally different in that each one differs both in the point of contact on the tongue (dorsal vs. laminal vs. apical) and the roof of the mouth (palatal vs. postalveolar vs. alveolar from all others). The other dialects have lost one of the two palatalized coronals but still have a two-way distinction. A similar distinction between palatal [ɲ] and alveolo-palatal [ṉʲ] exists in some nonstandard forms of Malayalam.

Examples

Some languages distinguish palatalized (alveolo-palatal) and non-palatalized (retroflex) postalveolar nasals and/or laterals.

Some Australian languages distinguish four coronal nasals and laterals: laminal dental [n̪ l̪], apical alveolar [n l], laminal postalveolar (palatalized) [ṉʲ ḻʲ], and apical postalveolar (retroflex) [ɳ ɭ].

The nonstandard Malayalam dialects mentioned above have five acute (including four coronal) nasals: laminal dental [n̪], apical alveolar [n], laminal postalveolar (palatalized) [ṉʲ], subapical palatal (retroflex) [ɳ], and dorsal palatal (palatalized) [ɲ] (in addition to labial [m] and velar [ŋ]). Standard Malayalam lacks the laminal palatalized postalveolar.

The conservative Irish dialects mentioned above also have five acute nasals, again including four coronal; however, only four different primary articulations are involved, as a secondary velarized/palatalized distinction is at play. The sounds in question are laminal dental velarized [n̪ˠ], apical alveolar velarized [nˠ], apical alveolar palatalized [nʲ], laminal postalveolar (palatalized) [ṉʲ], and dorsal palatal [ɲ] (in addition to labial velarized [mˠ], labial palatalized [mʲ] and velar [ŋ]). The eight sounds participate in four velarized/palatalized pairs: [mˠ mʲ]; [n̪ˠ ṉʲ]; [nˠ nʲ]; [ŋ ɲ]. Other dialects have variously reduced the four coronal nasals to three or two.

Postalveolar clicks

There are two postalveolar click types that can occur, commonly described as "postalveolar" and "palatal", but they would be perhaps more accurately described as apical and laminal postalveolar, respectively:

IPA Description Example
Language Orthography IPA Meaning
  Apical (post)alveolar click Nama !oas [k͡ǃoas] hollow
  Laminal postalveolar click !Kung ǂua [k͡ǂwa] to imitate

See also

References

  1. ^ The Toda language consistently uses a laminal articulation for its palato-alveolar sibilants, which presumably makes the sound a bit "sharper", more like the alveolo-palatal sibilants, increasing the perceptual difference from the two types of retroflex sibilants that also occur in Toda.
  2. ^ Ladefoged, Peter; Maddieson, Ian (1996). The Sounds of the World's Languages. Oxford: Blackwell. ISBN 978-0-631-19815-4.
  3. ^ Ladefoged, Peter; Maddieson, Ian (1996). The Sounds of the World's Languages. Oxford: Blackwell. ISBN 978-0-631-19815-4.

postalveolar, consonant, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, au. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Postalveolar consonant news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article contains phonetic transcriptions in the International Phonetic Alphabet IPA For an introductory guide on IPA symbols see Help IPA For the distinction between and see IPA Brackets and transcription delimiters Postalveolar or post alveolar consonants are consonants articulated with the tongue near or touching the back of the alveolar ridge Articulation is farther back in the mouth than the alveolar consonants which are at the ridge itself but not as far back as the hard palate the place of articulation for palatal consonants Examples of postalveolar consonants are the English palato alveolar consonants ʃ tʃ ʒ dʒ as in the words ship chill vision and jump respectively There are many types of postalveolar sounds especially among the sibilants The three primary types are palato alveolar such as ʃ ʒ weakly palatalized alveolo palatal such as ɕ ʑ strongly palatalized and retroflex such as ʂ ʐ unpalatalized The palato alveolar and alveolo palatal subtypes are commonly counted as palatals in phonology since they rarely contrast with true palatal consonants Contents 1 Postalveolar sibilants 1 1 Tongue shape 1 2 Point of tongue contact laminal apical subapical 1 3 Position of tongue tip laminal closed 1 4 Examples 2 Postalveolar non sibilants 2 1 Non palatalized retroflex 2 2 Palatalized 2 3 Examples 3 Postalveolar clicks 4 See also 5 ReferencesPostalveolar sibilants EditFor most sounds involving the tongue the place of articulation can be sufficiently identified just by specifying the point of contact on the upper part of the mouth for example velar consonants involve contact on the soft palate and dental consonants involve the teeth along with any secondary articulation such as palatalization raising of the tongue body or labialization lip rounding However among sibilants particularly postalveolar sibilants there are slight differences in the shape of the tongue and the point of contact on the tongue itself which correspond to large differences in the resulting sound For example the alveolar fricative s and the three postalveolar fricatives ɕ ʃ ʂ differ noticeably both in pitch and sharpness the order s ɕ ʃ ʂ corresponds to progressively lower pitched and duller less hissy or piercing sounds s is the highest pitched and most piercing which is the reason that hissing sounds like Sssst or Psssst are typically used to attract someone s attention As a result it is necessary to specify many additional subtypes Tongue shape Edit The main distinction is the shape of the tongue which corresponds to differing degrees of palatalization raising of the body of the tongue From least to most palatalized they are retroflex such as ʂ ʐ unpalatalized palato alveolar such as ʃ ʒ weakly palatalized and alveolo palatal such as ɕ ʑ strongly palatalized The increasing palatalization corresponds to progressively higher pitched and sharper sounding consonants Less technically the retroflex consonant ʂ sounds somewhat like a mixture between the regular English ʃ of ship and the h at the beginning of heard especially when it is pronounced forcefully and with a strong American r The alveolo palatal consonant ɕ sounds like a strongly palatalized version of ʃ somewhat like nourish you Palato alveolar sounds are normally described as having a convex a bunched up or domed tongue The front central part of the tongue is somewhat raised compared to the tip back and sides which gives it a weak palatalization For retroflex sounds the tongue shape is either concave usually when apical or subapical made with the tip of the tongue or flat usually when laminal made with the area behind the tongue tip For alveolo palatal sounds the front half of the tongue is flat and raised so that it closely parallels the upper surface of the mouth from the teeth to the hard palate Behind that is a sudden convex bend The following table shows the three types of postalveolar sibilant fricatives defined in the IPA IPA transcription of postalveolar sibilants Voiceless VoicedIPA Description Example IPA Description ExampleLanguage Orthography IPA Meaning Language Orthography IPA Meaning Voiceless palato alveolar sibilant English shin ʃɪn shin Voiced palato alveolar sibilant English vision vɪʒen vision Voiceless alveolo palatal sibilant Mandarin 小 xiǎo ɕiɑu small Voiced alveolo palatal sibilant Polish ziolo ʑɔwɔ herb voiceless retroflex sibilant Mandarin 上海 Shanghǎi ʂɑ ŋ xaɪ Shanghai voiced retroflex sibilant RussianPolish zhaba zaba zaba ʐabe ʐaba toadfrogPoint of tongue contact laminal apical subapical Edit A second variable is whether the contact occurs with the very tip of the tongue an apical articulation ʃ with the surface just above the tip the blade of the tongue a laminal articulation ʃ or with the underside of the tip a subapical articulation Apical and subapical articulations are always tongue up with the tip of the tongue above the teeth and laminal articulations are often tongue down with the tip of the tongue behind the lower teeth The upward curvature of the tongue tip to make apical or subapical contact renders palatalization more difficult so domed palato alveolar consonants are not attested with subapical articulation and fully palatalized such as alveolo palatal sounds occur only with laminal articulation Also the apical laminal distinction among palato alveolar sounds makes little although presumably non zero 1 perceptible difference both articulations in fact occur among English speakers 2 As a result the differing points of tongue contact laminal apical and subapical are significant largely for retroflex sounds Retroflex sounds can also occur outside of the postalveolar region ranging from as far back as the hard palate to as far forward as the alveolar region behind the teeth Subapical retroflex sounds are often palatal and vice versa which occur particularly in the Dravidian languages Position of tongue tip laminal closed Edit There is an additional distinction that can be made among tongue down laminal sounds depending on exactly where behind the lower teeth the tongue tip is placed A bit behind the lower teeth is a hollow area or pit in the lower surface of the mouth When the tongue tip rests in the hollowed area there is an empty space below the tongue a sublingual cavity which results in a relatively more hushing sound When the tip of the tongue rests against the lower teeth there is no sublingual cavity resulting in a more hissing sound Generally the tongue down postalveolar consonants have the tongue tip on the hollowed area with a sublingual cavity whereas for the tongue down alveolar consonants the tongue tip rests against the teeth no sublingual cavity which accentuates the hissing vs hushing distinction of these sounds However the palato alveolar sibilants in Northwest Caucasian languages such as the extinct Ubykh have the tongue tip resting directly against the lower teeth rather than in the hollowed area Ladefoged and Maddieson 3 term it a closed laminal postalveolar articulation which gives the sounds a quality that Catford describes as hissing hushing sounds Catford transcribes them as ŝ ẑ that is not IPA notation the obsolete IPA letters ʆ ʓ have occasionally been resurrected for these sounds A laminal closed articulation could also be made with alveolo palatal sibilants and a laminal non closed articulation with alveolar sibilants but no language appears to do so In addition no language seems to have a minimal contrast between two sounds based only on the closed non closed variation with no concomitant articulatory distinctions for all languages including the Northwest Caucasian languages if the language has two laminal sibilants one of which is closed and the other is non closed they will also differ in some other ways Examples Edit A few languages distinguish three different postalveolar sibilant tongue shapes ʂ ʃ ɕ such as the Sino Tibetan Northern Qiang and Southern Qiang which make such a distinction among affricates but only a two way distinction among fricatives and the Northwest Caucasian languages Ubykh now extinct and Abkhaz More common are languages such as Mandarin Chinese and Polish which distinguish two postalveolar sibilants typically ʂ ɕ since they are maximally distinct The attested possibilities with exemplar languages are as follows IPA diacritics are simplified and some articulations would require two diacritics to be fully specified but only one is used to keep the results legible without the need for OpenType IPA fonts Also Peter Ladefoged whose notation is used here has resurrected an obsolete IPA symbol the under dot to indicate the apical postalveolar which is normally included in the category of retroflex consonants The notation s ṣ is sometimes reversed and either may also be called retroflex and written ʂ IPA Place of articulation Exemplifying languages s z laminal flat postalveolar laminal retroflex Polish sz rz cz dz Mandarin sh zh ch ṣ ẓ apical postalveolar apical retroflex Ubykh Toda ʃ ʒ domed postalveolar palato alveolar English sh zh may be either laminal or apical ʃ ʒ laminal domed postalveolar Toda ɕ ʑ laminal palatalized postalveolar alveolo palatal Mandarin q j x Polish c s z dz Ubykh ŝ ẑ laminal closed postalveolar Ubykh ʂ ʐ subapical postalveolar or palatal subapical retroflex TodaPostalveolar non sibilants EditNon sibilant sounds can also be made in the postalveolar region the number of acoustically distinct variations is then significantly reduced The primary distinction for such sounds is between laminal palatalized and apical retroflex non palatalized Subapical retroflex non sibilants also occur but tend to be palatal as for sibilants Non palatalized retroflex Edit Retroflex stops nasals and laterals like ʈ ɳ ɭ occur in a number of languages across the world such as in South Asian languages such as Hindi and various East Asian languages such as Vietnamese The sounds are fairly rare in European languages but occur for example in Swedish they are then often considered to be allophones of sequences such as rn or rt Also for some languages that distinguish dental vs alveolar stops and nasals they are actually articulated nearer to prealveolar and postalveolar respectively The normal rhotic consonant r sound in American English is a retroflex approximant ɻ the equivalent in British English is an alveolar approximant ɹ Retroflex rhotics of various sorts especially approximants and flaps occur commonly in the world s languages Some languages also have retroflex trills Tamil and Malayalam have two trills at least for many speakers r vs r the latter of which being retroflex Toda is particularly unusual in that it has six trills including a palatalized non palatalized distinction and a three way place distinction among dental alveolar and retroflex trills Palatalized Edit Palatalized postalveolar non sibilants are usually considered to be alveolo palatal Some non sibilant sounds in some languages are said to be palato alveolar rather than alveolo palatal but in practice it is unclear if there is any consistent acoustic distinction between the two types of sounds In phonological descriptions alveolo palatal postalveolar non sibilants are usually not distinguished as such but are considered to be variants of either palatal non sibilants such as c ɲ ʎ or of palatalized alveolar non sibilants such as tʲ nʲ lʲ Even the two types are often not distinguished among nasals and laterals as almost all languages have only one palatalized palatal nasal or lateral in their phonemic inventories For example the sound described as a palatal lateral in various Romance languages and often indicated as ʎ is most often alveolo palatal ḻʲ like in Catalan and Italian and sometimes a palatalized alveolar lʲ such as in some northern Brazilian Portuguese dialects The IPA does not have specific symbols for alveolo palatal non sibilants but they can be denoted using the advanced diacritic like c ɲ ʎ Sinologists often use special symbols for alveolo palatal non sibilants ȶ ȵ ȴ created by analogy with the curls used to mark alveolo palatal sibilants However the actual sounds indicated using these symbols are often palatal or palatalized alveolar rather than alveolo palatal like the variation for symbols like ɲ ʎ The decision to use the special alveolo palatal symbols in sinology is largely based on distributional similarities between the sounds in question and the alveolo palatal sibilants which are prominent in many East Asian languages However a few languages distinguish alveolo palatal sounds from other palatalized non sibilants in the dental to palatal region Many conservative dialects of Irish in fact have a three way distinction among palatalized nasals between dorsal palatal ɲ laminal alveolo palatal ṉʲ and apical palatalized alveolar nʲ That is typical with oppositions among similar sounds in a single language the sounds being maximally different in that each one differs both in the point of contact on the tongue dorsal vs laminal vs apical and the roof of the mouth palatal vs postalveolar vs alveolar from all others The other dialects have lost one of the two palatalized coronals but still have a two way distinction A similar distinction between palatal ɲ and alveolo palatal ṉʲ exists in some nonstandard forms of Malayalam Examples Edit Some languages distinguish palatalized alveolo palatal and non palatalized retroflex postalveolar nasals and or laterals Some Australian languages distinguish four coronal nasals and laterals laminal dental n l apical alveolar n l laminal postalveolar palatalized ṉʲ ḻʲ and apical postalveolar retroflex ɳ ɭ The nonstandard Malayalam dialects mentioned above have five acute including four coronal nasals laminal dental n apical alveolar n laminal postalveolar palatalized ṉʲ subapical palatal retroflex ɳ and dorsal palatal palatalized ɲ in addition to labial m and velar ŋ Standard Malayalam lacks the laminal palatalized postalveolar The conservative Irish dialects mentioned above also have five acute nasals again including four coronal however only four different primary articulations are involved as a secondary velarized palatalized distinction is at play The sounds in question are laminal dental velarized n ˠ apical alveolar velarized nˠ apical alveolar palatalized nʲ laminal postalveolar palatalized ṉʲ and dorsal palatal ɲ in addition to labial velarized mˠ labial palatalized mʲ and velar ŋ The eight sounds participate in four velarized palatalized pairs mˠ mʲ n ˠ ṉʲ nˠ nʲ ŋ ɲ Other dialects have variously reduced the four coronal nasals to three or two Postalveolar clicks EditThere are two postalveolar click types that can occur commonly described as postalveolar and palatal but they would be perhaps more accurately described as apical and laminal postalveolar respectively IPA Description ExampleLanguage Orthography IPA Meaning Apical post alveolar click Nama oas k ǃoas hollow Laminal postalveolar click Kung ǂua k ǂwa to imitateSee also EditPlace of articulation Palato alveolar consonant Alveolo palatal consonant Retroflex consonant List of phonetics topicsReferences Edit The Toda language consistently uses a laminal articulation for its palato alveolar sibilants which presumably makes the sound a bit sharper more like the alveolo palatal sibilants increasing the perceptual difference from the two types of retroflex sibilants that also occur in Toda Ladefoged Peter Maddieson Ian 1996 The Sounds of the World s Languages Oxford Blackwell ISBN 978 0 631 19815 4 Ladefoged Peter Maddieson Ian 1996 The Sounds of the World s Languages Oxford Blackwell ISBN 978 0 631 19815 4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Postalveolar consonant amp oldid 1093835145, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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