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Syllabic consonant

A syllabic consonant or vocalic consonant is a consonant that forms a syllable on its own, like the m, n and l in some pronunciations of the English words rhythm, button and bottle. To represent it, the understroke diacritic in the International Phonetic Alphabet is used, U+0329 ◌̩ COMBINING VERTICAL LINE BELOW. It may be instead represented by an overstroke, U+030D ◌̍ COMBINING VERTICAL LINE ABOVE if the symbol that it modifies has a descender, such as in [ŋ̍].[1]

Syllabic
◌̩
◌̍
IPA Number431
Encoding
Entity (decimal)̩
Unicode (hex)U+0329

Syllabic consonants in most languages are sonorants, such as nasals and liquids. Very few have syllabic obstruents (i.e., stops, fricatives, and affricates) in normal words, but English has syllabic fricatives in paralinguistic words like shh! and zzz.

Examples edit

Germanic languages edit

In many varieties of High and Low German, pronouncing syllabic consonants may be considered a shibboleth. In High German and Tweants (a Low Saxon dialect spoken in the Netherlands; more Low Saxon dialects have the syllabic consonant), all word-final syllables in infinite verbs and feminine plural nouns spelled -en are pronounced with syllabic consonants. The High German infinitive laufen ('to walk') is pronounced [ˈlaʊfn̩] or (in some accents) even [ˈlaʊfɱ̍] and its Tweants counterpart loopn is pronounced [ˈlɔːʔm̩]. Tweants scholars even debate whether or not this feature should be incorporated in spelling, resulting in two generally accepted spelling forms (either loopn or lopen).

Uniquely, standard German spoken in Luxembourg often lacks syllabic sonorants under the influence of Luxembourgish, so that laufen is pronounced [ˈlaʊfən], rather than [ˈlaʊfn̩].[2][3]

Many dialects of English may use syllabic consonants in words such as even [ˈiːvn̩], awful [ˈɔːfɫ̩] and rhythm [ˈɹɪðm̩], which English dictionaries' respelling systems usually treat as realizations of underlying sequences of schwa and a consonant (for example, /ˈiːvən/).[4]

In Danish, a syllabic consonant is the standard colloquial realization of combinations of the phoneme schwa /ə/ and a sonorant, generally referred to as schwa-assimilation,[5] e.g. katten ('the cat') /ˈkatən/ = [ˈkʰætn̩], dame ('lady') /ˈdaːmə/ = [ˈtɛːm̩], cykel ('bike') /ˈsykəl/ = [ˈsykl̩], myre ('ant') /ˈmyːrə/ = [ˈmyːɐ], sove ('sleep') /ˈsɒːʋə/ = [ˈsɒːʊ], reje ('shrimp') /ˈraːjə/ = [ˈʁɑːɪ], or huset ('the house') /ˈhuːˀsəð/ = [ˈhuːˀsð̩ˠ].

In all four dialect groups of Norwegian, a syllabic alveolar nasal, /n/, may be heard. It is syllabic when following other alveolar consonants and occurs most often in the definite singular form of masculine nouns (see Norwegian grammar) where the schwa has elided, e.g. bilen ('the car') [biː.ln̩], where it was originally [biː.lən]. With some speakers, the schwa may be reinserted, especially for words already ending in /n/ where the syllabic /n/ may have been entirely elided afterward, e.g. mannen ('the man') can either be pronounced like [mɑ.nn̩], [mɑn] or [man.nən].[6][7] In addition to this, a syllabic /n/ always occurs in words like vatn ('water') [ʋa.tn̩] and botn ('bottom') [bɔ.tn̩]. This syllabification of alveolar nasals also appears in some Swedish dialects[which?]. In all cases where the alveolar sound becomes retroflex, /n/ also becomes retroflex /ɳ/, e.g. barten ('the moustache') [ba.ʈɳ̩] (see Norwegian phonology#Consonants). In some Norwegian dialects, a syllabic alveolar lateral approximant /l/ may be heard in the same circumstances as syllabic /n/, e.g. puddel ('poodle') [pʉ.dl̩], though it is not as common as syllabic /n/. A syllabic /l/ may also be heard in Bergen, where a following syllabic /n/ has elided completely, e.g. solen ('the sun') [suː.l̩].[8] In dialects that have palatalisation of some alveolar consonants like Northern Norwegian and Trøndersk, the following syllabic /n/ is also palatalised,[9] e.g. ballen ('the ball') [ba.ʎɲ̩].

Obstruents edit

All of the consonants syllabicized in Germanic languages are sonorants. However, the only time obstruents are used syllabically in English is in onomatopoeia, such as sh! [ ʃ̩ː] (a command to be quiet), sss [s̩ː] (the hiss of a snake), zzz [z̩ː] (the sound of a bee buzzing or someone sleeping), and tsk tsk! [ǀǀ] (used to express disapproval or pity), though it is not certain how to define what a syllable is in such cases.

Sanskrit edit

Sanskrit [r̩], ऌ [l̩] are syllabic consonants, allophones of consonantal r and l. This continues the reconstructed situation of Proto-Indo-European, where both liquids and nasals had syllabic allophones, r̩, l̩, m̩, n̩.

Slavic languages edit

Many Slavic languages allow syllabic consonants. Some examples include:

  • Czech and Slovak r [r] and l [l], as in the phrase Strč prst skrz krk 'stick your finger through the throat' (in both languages). Slovak also has long versions of these syllabic consonants, ŕ and ĺ, e.g.: kĺb [kɫ̩ːp] 'joint', vŕba [ˈvr̩ːba] 'willow', škvŕn [ʃkvr̩ːn] '(of) spots'. Czech also has m̩ and n̩, e.g.: sedm [sedm̩~sedn̩] 'seven'.[10]
  • Slovene [m̩], [n̩] and [l̩] in non-native words, e.g. Vltava.[11]
  • Serbo-Croatian r [r], such as in trčati 'to run'; l [l], such as in Vltava 'Vltava'; and n [n], such as in Njutn 'Newton'. Most Torlakian dialects of south-eastern Serbia exhibit a regular syllabic l [l] which corresponds to a u [u] in the standards. For example, in vlk ("wolf", vuk in the standard) and slza ("tear", suza in the standard). In dialects between the Kupa river and Velebit of pre-war Croatia, other consonants are also syllabic. For example, t [t̪], such as in mostć (which is mostić 'small bridge' in standard Croatian); and č [tʃ], such as in klinčć (which is klinčić ('clove') in standard Croatian).[12]
  • Macedonian р [r], such as in прв [ˈpr̩f] 'first', срце [ˈsr̩t͡sɛ] 'heart', незадржлив [nɛˈzadr̩ʒlif] 'irrepressible', рбет [ˈr̩bɛt] 'spine', рѓа [ˈr̩ɟa] 'to rust', рчи [ˈr̩t͡ʃi] 'to snore', etc.

Sinitic languages edit

Several Sinitic languages, such as Cantonese and Hokkien, feature both syllabic m ([m̩]) and ng ([ŋ̍]) that stand alone as their own words. In Cantonese, the former is most often used in the word meaning 'not' (, [m̭̍]) while the latter can be seen in the word for 'five' (, [ŋ̬̍]) and the surname Ng (, [ŋ̭̍] or , [ŋ̬̍], depending on the tone), among others.

Syllabic fricatives edit

A number of languages have syllabic fricatives or fricative vowels. In several varieties of Chinese, certain high vowels following fricatives or affricates are pronounced as extensions of those sounds, with voicing added (if not already present) and a vowel pronounced while the tongue and teeth remain in the same position as for the preceding consonant, leading to the turbulence of a fricative carrying over into the vowel. In Mandarin Chinese, this happens for example with , , shī, and . Traditional grammars describe them as having a "buzzing" sound. A number of modern linguists[13][14] describe them as true syllabic fricatives, although with weak frication and voicing.[15] They are accordingly transcribed sź̩, tsź̩, ʂʐ̩́, and ʐʐ̩́ respectively.[16]

However, for many speakers, the friction carries over only into the beginning of the vowel.[17] The tongue and teeth remain where they were, but the tongue contact is lessened a bit to allow for a high approximant vowel with no frication except at the beginning, during the transition. John Wells[18] uses the detailed transcriptions sz̞ᵚ for si and ʂʐ̩ᶤ for shi (ignoring the tone), with the superscript indicating the "color" of the sound and a lowering diacritic on the z to indicate that the tongue contact is relaxed enough to prevent frication. Another researcher suggests s͡ɯ and ʂ͡ɨ for si and shi, respectively, to indicate that the frication of the consonant may extend onto the vowel.[19] Some speakers have even more lax articulation, opening the teeth and noticeably lowering the tongue, so that sī shī rī are pronounced [sɯ́ ʂɯ́ ʐɯ́], with the same vowel [ɯ] in each case and no r-coloring[citation needed].

The Nuosu language has two similar "buzzed" vowels that are described as syllabic fricatives, [β̩, ɹ̝̍[citation needed]]. The former may even be trilled [ʙ̞̍].

Sinologists and linguists working in the Chinese analytical tradition frequently use the term apical vowel (舌尖元音 shéjiān yuányīn) to describe the sounds above and others like them in various Sino-Tibetan languages. However, this is a misnomer, as the tongue is actually laminal[citation needed]. The nonstandard symbols ɿ ʅ ʮ ʯ are commonly used to transcribe these vowels in place of z̩ ʐ̩ z̩ʷ ʐ̩ʷ or C͡ɯ C͡ɨ C͡u C͡ʉ, respectively. The term apical vowel should also not be taken as synonymous with syllabic fricative, as e.g., the bilabial syllabic fricative [β̩] in Liangshan Yi is not pronounced with the tongue.

Other languages edit

Berber, Salish, Wakashan and Chemakuan languages have syllabic obstruents in normal vocabulary, such as Nuxálk [p̍ʰ.t̩ʰ.k̩ʰ.ts̩ʰ], [s̩.pʰs̩] "northeast wind", [ɬ̩.q̍ʰ] 'wet', [ť̩.ɬ̩.ɬ̩] 'dry', or [nu.jam.ɬ̩] 'we (ɬ̩) used to sing (nu.jam.ɬ̩)'.

In Standard Yoruba, the consonants m and n may be syllabic and carry tone like vowels. However, they always stand alone as syllables and cannot stand as syllable nuclei.

In Baoulé, m or n may be syllabic. As a stand-alone word, it means 'I' (first person subject pronoun), as in N ti baule [n̩̄ tɪ̄ bāūlē] 'I speak Baoulé'. Its quality varies with the consonant following it, as in M bá aiman [m̩̄ āɪ̄mān] 'I will come tomorrow'.

The Hungarian word s [ʃ̩], a high-register variant of és 'and', is a syllabic consonant, although it usually cliticises: s ettem /ʃ̩ɛtːɛm/ [ʃɛtːɛm] 'and I had eaten'.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ International Phonetic Association, Handbook, pp. 14–15.
  2. ^ Dudenredaktion; Kleiner, Stefan; Knöbl, Ralf (2015) [First published 1962]. Das Aussprachewörterbuch (in German) (7th ed.). Berlin: Dudenverlag. p. 39. ISBN 978-3-411-04067-4.
  3. ^ Gilles, Peter; Trouvain, Jürgen (2013). "Luxembourgish" (PDF). Journal of the International Phonetic Association. 43 (1): 70–71. doi:10.1017/S0025100312000278.
  4. ^ See the Pronunciation guide 2017-01-06 at the Wayback Machine of the Merriam-Webster dictionary.
  5. ^ Grønnum, Nina (June 1998). "Danish". Journal of the International Phonetic Association. 28 (1–2): 99–105. doi:10.1017/S0025100300006290. ISSN 1475-3502. S2CID 249412109.
  6. ^ Sandøy, H. (1993) "Talemål", Novus forlag, Oslo. ISBN 82-7099-206-2.
  7. ^ Skjekkeland, M. 1997 "Dei norske dialektane - Tradisjonelle særdrag i jamføring med skriftmåla", Høyskoleforlaget AS, Kristiansand S. ISBN 82-7634-103-9.
  8. ^ Pettersen, E. 1990 "Bergens bymål", Novus Forlag AS, Oslo. ISBN 82-7099-167-8
  9. ^ Bruyninckx, Harmegnies (October 2000). (PDF). ISCA Archive. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-10-17. Retrieved 2019-10-17.
  10. ^ Bělič, Jaromír (1972). "Sedm, sedmnáct, sedmdesát…". Naše řeč. 55 (2–3): 72–78. from the original on 2013-05-26. Retrieved 2012-06-28.
  11. ^ Toporišič, Jože. 1992. Enciklopedija slovenskega jezika. Ljubljana: Mladinska knjiga, p. 377.
  12. ^ Božidar Finka, Hrvatski dijalektološki zbornik 7, vol. 1 (1985), pp. 100, 101. Note, these are products of reduction so the only one of phonological importance is syllabic "r"
  13. ^ Jerry Norman (1988). Chinese (Cambridge Linguistic Surveys). Cambridge University Press. P. 142.
  14. ^ S. Robert Ramsey (1987). The Languages of China. Princeton University Press. P. 45.
  15. ^ Wiese, Richard (1997). "Underspecification and the description of Chinese vowels". In Wang, Jialing; Smith, Norval (eds.). Studies in Chinese Phonology. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. pp. 219–249.
  16. ^ San Duanmu (2008). "Syllable Structure in Chinese 2020-11-27 at the Wayback Machine" (ch. 4). In Syllable Structure. Oxford. 304 pp. Accessed Feb 21, 2013.
  17. ^ UCLA Phonetics Lab Data: [1] 2021-01-25 at the Wayback Machine.
  18. ^ John Wells (March 15, 2007). "Chinese apical vowels 2021-10-24 at the Wayback Machine. John Wells's phonetic blog. Accessed Feb 21, 2013.
  19. ^ Kwan-hin Cheung, 1992. "北京話 '知' '資' 二韻國際音標寫法商榷" [IPA transcription of the so-called 'apical vowels' in Pekinese], in T. Lee, ed., Research on Chinese Linguistics in Hong Kong, Linguistic Society of Hong Kong.

syllabic, 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, july, . 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 Syllabic consonant news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message A syllabic consonant or vocalic consonant is a consonant that forms a syllable on its own like the m n and l in some pronunciations of the English words rhythm button and bottle To represent it the understroke diacritic in the International Phonetic Alphabet is used U 0329 COMBINING VERTICAL LINE BELOW It may be instead represented by an overstroke U 030D COMBINING VERTICAL LINE ABOVE if the symbol that it modifies has a descender such as in ŋ 1 Syllabic IPA Number431EncodingEntity decimal amp 809 Unicode hex U 0329Syllabic consonants in most languages are sonorants such as nasals and liquids Very few have syllabic obstruents i e stops fricatives and affricates in normal words but English has syllabic fricatives in paralinguistic words like shh and zzz Contents 1 Examples 1 1 Germanic languages 1 1 1 Obstruents 1 2 Sanskrit 1 3 Slavic languages 1 4 Sinitic languages 1 4 1 Syllabic fricatives 1 5 Other languages 2 See also 3 ReferencesExamples editGermanic languages edit See also Stress and vowel reduction in English Syllabic consonants In many varieties of High and Low German pronouncing syllabic consonants may be considered a shibboleth In High German and Tweants a Low Saxon dialect spoken in the Netherlands more Low Saxon dialects have the syllabic consonant all word final syllables in infinite verbs and feminine plural nouns spelled en are pronounced with syllabic consonants The High German infinitive laufen to walk is pronounced ˈlaʊfn or in some accents even ˈlaʊfɱ and its Tweants counterpart loopn is pronounced ˈlɔːʔm Tweants scholars even debate whether or not this feature should be incorporated in spelling resulting in two generally accepted spelling forms either loopn or lopen Uniquely standard German spoken in Luxembourg often lacks syllabic sonorants under the influence of Luxembourgish so that laufen is pronounced ˈlaʊfen rather than ˈlaʊfn 2 3 Many dialects of English may use syllabic consonants in words such as even ˈiːvn awful ˈɔːfɫ and rhythm ˈɹɪdm which English dictionaries respelling systems usually treat as realizations of underlying sequences of schwa and a consonant for example ˈiːven 4 In Danish a syllabic consonant is the standard colloquial realization of combinations of the phoneme schwa e and a sonorant generally referred to as schwa assimilation 5 e g katten the cat ˈkaten ˈkʰaetn dame lady ˈdaːme ˈtɛːm cykel bike ˈsykel ˈsykl myre ant ˈmyːre ˈmyːɐ sove sleep ˈsɒːʋe ˈsɒːʊ reje shrimp ˈraːje ˈʁɑːɪ or huset the house ˈhuːˀsed ˈhuːˀsd ˠ In all four dialect groups of Norwegian a syllabic alveolar nasal n may be heard It is syllabic when following other alveolar consonants and occurs most often in the definite singular form of masculine nouns see Norwegian grammar where the schwa has elided e g bilen the car biː ln where it was originally biː len With some speakers the schwa may be reinserted especially for words already ending in n where the syllabic n may have been entirely elided afterward e g mannen the man can either be pronounced like mɑ nn mɑn or man nen 6 7 In addition to this a syllabic n always occurs in words like vatn water ʋa tn and botn bottom bɔ tn This syllabification of alveolar nasals also appears in some Swedish dialects which In all cases where the alveolar sound becomes retroflex n also becomes retroflex ɳ e g barten the moustache ba ʈɳ see Norwegian phonology Consonants In some Norwegian dialects a syllabic alveolar lateral approximant l may be heard in the same circumstances as syllabic n e g puddel poodle pʉ dl though it is not as common as syllabic n A syllabic l may also be heard in Bergen where a following syllabic n has elided completely e g solen the sun suː l 8 In dialects that have palatalisation of some alveolar consonants like Northern Norwegian and Trondersk the following syllabic n is also palatalised 9 e g ballen the ball ba ʎɲ Obstruents edit All of the consonants syllabicized in Germanic languages are sonorants However the only time obstruents are used syllabically in English is in onomatopoeia such as sh ʃ ː a command to be quiet sss s ː the hiss of a snake zzz z ː the sound of a bee buzzing or someone sleeping and tsk tsk ǀǀ used to express disapproval or pity though it is not certain how to define what a syllable is in such cases Sanskrit edit Sanskrit ऋ ṛ r ऌ ḷ l are syllabic consonants allophones of consonantal r and l This continues the reconstructed situation of Proto Indo European where both liquids and nasals had syllabic allophones r l m n Slavic languages edit Many Slavic languages allow syllabic consonants Some examples include Czech and Slovak r r and l l as in the phrase Strc prst skrz krk stick your finger through the throat in both languages Slovak also has long versions of these syllabic consonants ŕ and ĺ e g kĺb kɫ ːp joint vŕba ˈvr ːba willow skvŕn ʃkvr ːn of spots Czech also has m and n e g sedm sedm sedn seven 10 Slovene m n and l in non native words e g Vltava 11 Serbo Croatian r r such as in trcati to run l l such as in Vltava Vltava and n n such as in Njutn Newton Most Torlakian dialects of south eastern Serbia exhibit a regular syllabic l l which corresponds to a u u in the standards For example in vlk wolf vuk in the standard and slza tear suza in the standard In dialects between the Kupa river and Velebit of pre war Croatia other consonants are also syllabic For example t t such as in mostc which is mostic small bridge in standard Croatian and c tʃ such as in klincc which is klincic clove in standard Croatian 12 Macedonian r r such as in prv ˈpr f first srce ˈsr t sɛ heart nezadrzhliv nɛˈzadr ʒlif irrepressible rbet ˈr bɛt spine rѓa ˈr ɟa to rust rchi ˈr t ʃi to snore etc Sinitic languages edit Several Sinitic languages such as Cantonese and Hokkien feature both syllabic m m and ng ŋ that stand alone as their own words In Cantonese the former is most often used in the word meaning not 唔 m while the latter can be seen in the word for five 五 ŋ and the surname Ng 吳 ŋ or 伍 ŋ depending on the tone among others Syllabic fricatives edit This section s factual accuracy is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help to ensure that disputed statements are reliably sourced November 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message A number of languages have syllabic fricatives or fricative vowels In several varieties of Chinese certain high vowels following fricatives or affricates are pronounced as extensions of those sounds with voicing added if not already present and a vowel pronounced while the tongue and teeth remain in the same position as for the preceding consonant leading to the turbulence of a fricative carrying over into the vowel In Mandarin Chinese this happens for example with si zi shi and ri Traditional grammars describe them as having a buzzing sound A number of modern linguists 13 14 describe them as true syllabic fricatives although with weak frication and voicing 15 They are accordingly transcribed sz tsz ʂʐ and ʐʐ respectively 16 However for many speakers the friction carries over only into the beginning of the vowel 17 The tongue and teeth remain where they were but the tongue contact is lessened a bit to allow for a high approximant vowel with no frication except at the beginning during the transition John Wells 18 uses the detailed transcriptions sz ᵚ for si and ʂʐ ᶤ for shi ignoring the tone with the superscript indicating the color of the sound and a lowering diacritic on the z to indicate that the tongue contact is relaxed enough to prevent frication Another researcher suggests s ɯ and ʂ ɨ for si and shi respectively to indicate that the frication of the consonant may extend onto the vowel 19 Some speakers have even more lax articulation opening the teeth and noticeably lowering the tongue so that si shi ri are pronounced sɯ ʂɯ ʐɯ with the same vowel ɯ in each case and no r coloring citation needed The Nuosu language has two similar buzzed vowels that are described as syllabic fricatives b ɹ citation needed The former may even be trilled ʙ Sinologists and linguists working in the Chinese analytical tradition frequently use the term apical vowel 舌尖元音 shejian yuanyin to describe the sounds above and others like them in various Sino Tibetan languages However this is a misnomer as the tongue is actually laminal citation needed The nonstandard symbols ɿ ʅ ʮ ʯ are commonly used to transcribe these vowels in place of z ʐ z ʷ ʐ ʷ or C ɯ C ɨ C u C ʉ respectively The term apical vowel should also not be taken as synonymous with syllabic fricative as e g the bilabial syllabic fricative b in Liangshan Yi is not pronounced with the tongue Other languages edit Berber Salish Wakashan and Chemakuan languages have syllabic obstruents in normal vocabulary such as Nuxalk p ʰ t ʰ k ʰ ts ʰ s pʰs northeast wind ɬ q ʰ wet t ɬ ɬ dry or nu jam ɬ we ɬ used to sing nu jam ɬ In Standard Yoruba the consonants m and n may be syllabic and carry tone like vowels However they always stand alone as syllables and cannot stand as syllable nuclei In Baoule m or n may be syllabic As a stand alone word it means I first person subject pronoun as in N ti baule n tɪ baule I speak Baoule Its quality varies with the consonant following it as in M ba aiman m ba aɪ man I will come tomorrow The Hungarian word s ʃ a high register variant of es and is a syllabic consonant although it usually cliticises s ettem ʃ ɛtːɛm ʃɛtːɛm and I had eaten See also edit Ƞ N with long right legReferences edit International Phonetic Association Handbook pp 14 15 Dudenredaktion Kleiner Stefan Knobl Ralf 2015 First published 1962 Das Ausspracheworterbuch in German 7th ed Berlin Dudenverlag p 39 ISBN 978 3 411 04067 4 Gilles Peter Trouvain Jurgen 2013 Luxembourgish PDF Journal of the International Phonetic Association 43 1 70 71 doi 10 1017 S0025100312000278 See the Pronunciation guide Archived 2017 01 06 at the Wayback Machine of the Merriam Webster dictionary Gronnum Nina June 1998 Danish Journal of the International Phonetic Association 28 1 2 99 105 doi 10 1017 S0025100300006290 ISSN 1475 3502 S2CID 249412109 Sandoy H 1993 Talemal Novus forlag Oslo ISBN 82 7099 206 2 Skjekkeland M 1997 Dei norske dialektane Tradisjonelle saerdrag i jamforing med skriftmala Hoyskoleforlaget AS Kristiansand S ISBN 82 7634 103 9 Pettersen E 1990 Bergens bymal Novus Forlag AS Oslo ISBN 82 7099 167 8 Bruyninckx Harmegnies October 2000 A STUDY OF PALATAL SEGMENTS PRODUCTION BY DANISH SPEAKERS PDF ISCA Archive Archived from the original PDF on 2019 10 17 Retrieved 2019 10 17 Belic Jaromir 1972 Sedm sedmnact sedmdesat Nase rec 55 2 3 72 78 Archived from the original on 2013 05 26 Retrieved 2012 06 28 Toporisic Joze 1992 Enciklopedija slovenskega jezika Ljubljana Mladinska knjiga p 377 Bozidar Finka Hrvatski dijalektoloski zbornik 7 vol 1 1985 pp 100 101 Note these are products of reduction so the only one of phonological importance is syllabic r Jerry Norman 1988 Chinese Cambridge Linguistic Surveys Cambridge University Press P 142 S Robert Ramsey 1987 The Languages of China Princeton University Press P 45 Wiese Richard 1997 Underspecification and the description of Chinese vowels In Wang Jialing Smith Norval eds Studies in Chinese Phonology Berlin Mouton de Gruyter pp 219 249 San Duanmu 2008 Syllable Structure in Chinese Archived 2020 11 27 at the Wayback Machine ch 4 In Syllable Structure Oxford 304 pp Accessed Feb 21 2013 UCLA Phonetics Lab Data 1 Archived 2021 01 25 at the Wayback Machine John Wells March 15 2007 Chinese apical vowels Archived 2021 10 24 at the Wayback Machine John Wells s phonetic blog Accessed Feb 21 2013 Kwan hin Cheung 1992 北京話 知 資 二韻國際音標寫法商榷 IPA transcription of the so called apical vowels in Pekinese in T Lee ed Research on Chinese Linguistics in Hong Kong Linguistic Society of Hong Kong Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Syllabic consonant amp oldid 1192795865, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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