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Tap and flap consonants

In phonetics, a flap or tap is a type of consonantal sound, which is produced with a single contraction of the muscles so that one articulator (such as the tongue) is thrown against another.

Contrast with stops and trills

The main difference between a tap or flap and a stop is that in a tap/flap there is no buildup of air pressure behind the place of articulation and consequently no release burst. Otherwise a tap/flap is similar to a brief stop.

Taps and flaps also contrast with trills, where the airstream causes the articulator to vibrate. Trills may be realized as a single contact, like a tap or flap, but are variable, whereas a tap/flap is limited to a single contact. When a trill is brief and made with a single contact it is sometimes erroneously described as an (allophonic) tap/flap, but a true tap or flap is an active articulation whereas a trill is a passive articulation. That is, for a tap or flap the tongue makes an active gesture to contact the target place of articulation, whereas with a trill the contact is due to the vibration caused by the airstream rather than any active movement.

Tap vs. flap

Many linguists use the terms tap and flap indiscriminately. Peter Ladefoged proposed for a while that it might be useful to distinguish between them. However, his usage was inconsistent and contradicted itself even between different editions of the same text.[1] One proposed version of the distinction was that a tap strikes its point of contact directly, as a very brief stop, but a flap strikes the point of contact tangentially: "Flaps are most typically made by retracting the tongue tip behind the alveolar ridge and moving it forward so that it strikes the ridge in passing."

Later, however, he used the term flap in all cases.[2] Subsequent work on the labiodental flap has clarified the issue: flaps involve retraction of the active articulator, and a forward-striking movement.[3]

For linguists who make the distinction, the alveolar flap is transcribed as a fish-hook ar, [ɾ], and the tap can be transcribed as a small capital D, [ᴅ], which is not recognized by the IPA, or by [d̆].[4] In IPA terms the retroflex flap [ɽ] symbol captures the initial retraction and subsequent forward movement of the tongue tip involved. Otherwise, alveolars are typically called taps, and other articulations are called flaps.

A few languages have been reported to contrast a tap and a flap at the same place of articulation. This is the case for Norwegian, in which the alveolar apical tap /ɾ/ and the post-alveolar/retroflex apical flap /ɽ/ have the same place of articulation for some speakers,[5] and Kamviri, which also has apical alveolar taps and flaps.[6]

IPA symbols

The tap and flap consonants identified by the International Phonetic Alphabet are:

IPA Description Example
Language Orthography IPA Meaning
ɾ alveolar tap North American English latter [læɾɚ] "latter"
ɺ alveolar lateral flap Venda vula [vuɺa] "to open"
ɽ retroflex flap Warlpiri rdupa [ɽupa] "windbreak"
labiodental flap Karang vbara [ara] "animal"

The Kiel Convention of the IPA recommended that for other taps and flaps, a homorganic consonant, such as a stop or trill, should be used with a breve diacritic:

Tap or flaps: where no independent symbol for a tap is provided, the breve diacritic should be used, e.g. [ʀ̆] or [n̆].[7]

However, the former could be mistaken for a short trill, and is more clearly transcribed ⟨ɢ̆⟩, whereas for a nasal tap the unambiguous transcription ⟨ɾ̃⟩ is generally used.

Types of taps and flaps

Attested tap and flap consonants[8]
Bilabial Labio-
dental
Linguo-
labial
Dental Alveolar Post-
alveolar
Retroflex Palatal Velar Uvular Epi-
glottal
Central oral ⱱ̟ (b̆, w̆) ⱱ̥ (f̆) · (v̆) ɾ̼ ɾ̪ ɾ̥ · ɾ ɾ̠ ɽ̊ · ɽ ɡ̆ ɢ̆ (ʀ̆) ʡ̮ (ʢ̮)
Central nasal ⱱ̟̃ (m̆) ɾ̪̃ ɾ̃ (n̆) ɽ̃ (ɳ̆ )
Central fricative ɾ̞̊ ɾ̞
Lateral oral ɺ̪ ɺ̥[9] · ɺ ɺ̠ 𝼈 (ɭ̆ ) ʎ̮ ʟ̆
Lateral nasal ɺ̃

Most of the alternative transcriptions in parentheses imply a tap rather than flap articulation, so for example the flap [ⱱ̟] and the tapped stop [b̆] are arguably distinct, as are flapped [ɽ̃] and tapped [ɳ̆].

Alveolar taps and flaps

Spanish features a good illustration of an alveolar flap, contrasting it with a trill: pero /ˈpeɾo/ "but" vs. perro /ˈpero/ "dog". Among the Germanic languages, the tap allophone occurs in American and Australian English and in Northern Low Saxon. In American and Australian English it tends to be an allophone of intervocalic /t/ and /d/, leading to homophonous pairs such as "metal" / "medal" and "latter" / "ladder" – see tapping. In a number of Low Saxon dialects it occurs as an allophone of intervocalic /d/ or /t/; e.g. den /beeden/ → [ˈbeːɾn] 'to pray', 'to request', gah to Bedde! /gaa tou bede/ → [ˌɡɑːtoʊˈbeɾe] 'go to bed!', Water /vaater/[ˈvɑːɾɜ] 'water', Vadder /fater/ → [ˈfaɾɜ] 'father'. (In some dialects this has resulted in reanalysis and a shift to /r/; thus bären [ˈbeːrn], to Berre [toʊˈbere], Warer [ˈvɑːrɜ], Varrer [ˈfarɜ].) Occurrence varies; in some Low Saxon dialects it affects both /t/ and /d/, while in others it affects only /d/. Other languages with this are Portuguese, Korean, and Austronesian languages with /r/.

In Galician, Portuguese and Sardinian, a flap often appears instead of a former /l/. This is part of a wider phenomenon called rhotacism.

Retroflex flaps

Most Indic and Dravidian languages have retroflex flaps. In Hindi there are three, a simple retroflex flap as in [bɐɽɑː] big, a murmured retroflex flap as in [koɽʱiː] leper, and a retroflex nasal flap in the Hindicized pronunciation of Sanskrit [mɐɽ̃i] ruby. Some of these may be allophonic.

A retroflex flap is also common in Norwegian dialects and some Swedish dialects.

Lateral taps and flaps

Many of the languages of Africa, Asia, and the Pacific that do not distinguish [r] from l may have a lateral flap. However, it is also possible that many of these languages do not have a lateral–central contrast at all, so that even a consistently neutral articulation may be perceived as sometimes lateral [ɺ] or [l], sometimes central [ɾ]. This has been suggested to be the case for Japanese, for example.[10]

The Iwaidja language of Australia has both alveolar and retroflex lateral flaps. These contrast with lateral approximants at the same positions, as well as a retroflex tap [ɽ], alveolar tap [ɾ], and retroflex approximant [ɻ]. However, the flapped, or tapped, laterals in Iwaidja are distinct from 'lateral flaps' as represented by the corresponding IPA symbols (see below). These phones consist of a flap component followed by a lateral component, whereas In Iwaidja the opposite is the case. For this reason, current IPA transcriptions of these sounds by linguists working on the language consist of an alveolar lateral followed by a superscript alveolar tap and a retroflex lateral followed by a superscript retroflex tap.

A velar lateral tap may exist as an allophone in a few languages of New Guinea, according to Peter Ladefoged and Ian Maddieson.

Non-coronal flaps

The only common non-coronal flap is the labiodental flap, found throughout central Africa in languages such as Margi. In 2005, the IPA adopted a right-hook v,

 

for this sound. (Supported by some fonts: [ⱱ].) Previously, it had been transcribed with the use of the breve diacritic, [v̆], or other ad hoc symbols.

Other taps or flaps are much less common. They include an epiglottal tap; a bilabial flap in Banda, which may be an allophone of the labiodental flap; and a velar lateral tap as an allophone in Kanite and Melpa. These are often transcribed with the breve diacritic, as [w̆, ʟ̆]. Note here that, like a velar trill, a central velar flap or tap is not possible because the tongue and soft palate cannot move together easily enough to produce a sound.

If other flaps are found, the breve diacritic could be used to represent them, but would more properly be combined with the symbol for the corresponding voiced stop. A palatal or uvular tap or flap, which unlike a velar tap is believed to be articulatorily possible, could be represented this way (by *[ɟ̆, ɢ̆~ʀ̆]).[11]

Nasal taps and flaps

Nasalized consonants include taps and flaps, although these are rarely phonemic. Many West African languages have a nasal flap [ɾ̃] (or [n̆]) as an allophone of /ɾ/ before a nasal vowel; Pashto, however, has a phonemic nasal retroflex lateral flap.[citation needed]

Tapped fricatives

Voiced and voiceless tapped alveolar fricatives have been reported from a few languages. Flapped fricatives are possible but do not seem to be used.[12] See voiced alveolar tapped fricative, voiceless alveolar tapped fricative.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Ladefoged, P. (1975, 1982, 1993) A Course in Phonetics. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. 1st, 2nd & 3rd editions
  2. ^ Spajić, Ladefoged & Bhaskararao (1996), 'The Trills of Toda', Journal of the International Phonetic Association, 26:1-21. p. 2
  3. ^ Olson, K. S. & Hajek, J. (2003). Crosslinguistic insights on the labial flap, "Linguistic Typology", 7: 157–186.
  4. ^ Ladefoged, P. (1971). Preliminaries to Linguistic Phonetics. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1971.
  5. ^ Moen et al. (2003) "The Articulation of the East Norwegian Apical Liquids /ɭ ɾ ɽ/"
  6. ^ Richard Strand, The Sound System of kâmvʹiri
  7. ^ "Report on the Kiel Convention", Journal of the International Phonetic Association 19:2, p 70.
  8. ^ Bickford & Floyd (2006) Articulatory Phonetics, Table 25.1, augmented by sources at the articles on individual consonants.
  9. ^ Phillips, Donald (1976) "Wahgi phonology and morphology". Pacific Linguistics B, issue 36
  10. ^ Ladefoged & Maddieson (1996), p. 243.
  11. ^ The IPA has recommended ⟨ʀ̆⟩, but that could be confused with an extra-short (e.g. one-contact) trill. ⟨ɢ̆⟩ is less ambiguous, because articulatorily taps are extra-short stops.
  12. ^ Laver (1994) Principles of Phonetics, p. 263.

References

  • Ladefoged, Peter; Maddieson, Ian (1996). The Sounds of the World's Languages. Oxford: Blackwell. ISBN 978-0-631-19815-4.

External links

  • A Crosslinguistic Lexicon of the Labial Flap

flap, consonants, 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, august, 2. 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 Tap and flap consonants news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2019 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 In phonetics a flap or tap is a type of consonantal sound which is produced with a single contraction of the muscles so that one articulator such as the tongue is thrown against another Contents 1 Contrast with stops and trills 2 Tap vs flap 3 IPA symbols 4 Types of taps and flaps 4 1 Alveolar taps and flaps 4 2 Retroflex flaps 4 3 Lateral taps and flaps 4 4 Non coronal flaps 4 5 Nasal taps and flaps 4 6 Tapped fricatives 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksContrast with stops and trills EditThe main difference between a tap or flap and a stop is that in a tap flap there is no buildup of air pressure behind the place of articulation and consequently no release burst Otherwise a tap flap is similar to a brief stop Taps and flaps also contrast with trills where the airstream causes the articulator to vibrate Trills may be realized as a single contact like a tap or flap but are variable whereas a tap flap is limited to a single contact When a trill is brief and made with a single contact it is sometimes erroneously described as an allophonic tap flap but a true tap or flap is an active articulation whereas a trill is a passive articulation That is for a tap or flap the tongue makes an active gesture to contact the target place of articulation whereas with a trill the contact is due to the vibration caused by the airstream rather than any active movement Tap vs flap EditMany linguists use the terms tap and flap indiscriminately Peter Ladefoged proposed for a while that it might be useful to distinguish between them However his usage was inconsistent and contradicted itself even between different editions of the same text 1 One proposed version of the distinction was that a tap strikes its point of contact directly as a very brief stop but a flap strikes the point of contact tangentially Flaps are most typically made by retracting the tongue tip behind the alveolar ridge and moving it forward so that it strikes the ridge in passing Later however he used the term flap in all cases 2 Subsequent work on the labiodental flap has clarified the issue flaps involve retraction of the active articulator and a forward striking movement 3 For linguists who make the distinction the alveolar flap is transcribed as a fish hook ar ɾ and the tap can be transcribed as a small capital D ᴅ which is not recognized by the IPA or by d 4 In IPA terms the retroflex flap ɽ symbol captures the initial retraction and subsequent forward movement of the tongue tip involved Otherwise alveolars are typically called taps and other articulations are called flaps A few languages have been reported to contrast a tap and a flap at the same place of articulation This is the case for Norwegian in which the alveolar apical tap ɾ and the post alveolar retroflex apical flap ɽ have the same place of articulation for some speakers 5 and Kamviri which also has apical alveolar taps and flaps 6 IPA symbols EditThe tap and flap consonants identified by the International Phonetic Alphabet are IPA Description ExampleLanguage Orthography IPA Meaningɾ alveolar tap North American English latter laeɾɚ latter ɺ alveolar lateral flap Venda vula vuɺa to open ɽ retroflex flap Warlpiri rdupa ɽupa windbreak ⱱ labiodental flap Karang vbara ⱱara animal The Kiel Convention of the IPA recommended that for other taps and flaps a homorganic consonant such as a stop or trill should be used with a breve diacritic Tap or flaps where no independent symbol for a tap is provided the breve diacritic should be used e g ʀ or n 7 However the former could be mistaken for a short trill and is more clearly transcribed ɢ whereas for a nasal tap the unambiguous transcription ɾ is generally used Types of taps and flaps EditAttested tap and flap consonants 8 Bilabial Labio dental Linguo labial Dental Alveolar Post alveolar Retroflex Palatal Velar Uvular Epi glottalCentral oral ⱱ b w ⱱ f ⱱ v ɾ ɾ ɾ ɾ ɾ ɽ ɽ ɡ ɢ ʀ ʡ ʢ Central nasal ⱱ m ɾ ɾ n ɽ ɳ Central fricative ɾ ɾ Lateral oral ɺ ɺ 9 ɺ ɺ ɭ ʎ ʟ Lateral nasal ɺ Most of the alternative transcriptions in parentheses imply a tap rather than flap articulation so for example the flap ⱱ and the tapped stop b are arguably distinct as are flapped ɽ and tapped ɳ Alveolar taps and flaps Edit Main article Dental and alveolar taps and flaps Spanish features a good illustration of an alveolar flap contrasting it with a trill pero ˈpeɾo but vs perro ˈpero dog Among the Germanic languages the tap allophone occurs in American and Australian English and in Northern Low Saxon In American and Australian English it tends to be an allophone of intervocalic t and d leading to homophonous pairs such as metal medal and latter ladder see tapping In a number of Low Saxon dialects it occurs as an allophone of intervocalic d or t e g baden beeden ˈbeːɾn to pray to request gah to Bedde gaa tou bede ˌɡɑːtoʊˈbeɾe go to bed Water vaater ˈvɑːɾɜ water Vadder fater ˈfaɾɜ father In some dialects this has resulted in reanalysis and a shift to r thus baren ˈbeːrn to Berre toʊˈbere Warer ˈvɑːrɜ Varrer ˈfarɜ Occurrence varies in some Low Saxon dialects it affects both t and d while in others it affects only d Other languages with this are Portuguese Korean and Austronesian languages with r In Galician Portuguese and Sardinian a flap often appears instead of a former l This is part of a wider phenomenon called rhotacism Retroflex flaps Edit Most Indic and Dravidian languages have retroflex flaps In Hindi there are three a simple retroflex flap as in bɐɽɑː big a murmured retroflex flap as in koɽʱiː leper and a retroflex nasal flap in the Hindicized pronunciation of Sanskrit mɐɽ i ruby Some of these may be allophonic A retroflex flap is also common in Norwegian dialects and some Swedish dialects Lateral taps and flaps Edit Many of the languages of Africa Asia and the Pacific that do not distinguish r from l may have a lateral flap However it is also possible that many of these languages do not have a lateral central contrast at all so that even a consistently neutral articulation may be perceived as sometimes lateral ɺ or l sometimes central ɾ This has been suggested to be the case for Japanese for example 10 The Iwaidja language of Australia has both alveolar and retroflex lateral flaps These contrast with lateral approximants at the same positions as well as a retroflex tap ɽ alveolar tap ɾ and retroflex approximant ɻ However the flapped or tapped laterals in Iwaidja are distinct from lateral flaps as represented by the corresponding IPA symbols see below These phones consist of a flap component followed by a lateral component whereas In Iwaidja the opposite is the case For this reason current IPA transcriptions of these sounds by linguists working on the language consist of an alveolar lateral followed by a superscript alveolar tap and a retroflex lateral followed by a superscript retroflex tap A velar lateral tap may exist as an allophone in a few languages of New Guinea according to Peter Ladefoged and Ian Maddieson Non coronal flaps Edit The only common non coronal flap is the labiodental flap found throughout central Africa in languages such as Margi In 2005 the IPA adopted a right hook v for this sound Supported by some fonts ⱱ Previously it had been transcribed with the use of the breve diacritic v or other ad hoc symbols Other taps or flaps are much less common They include an epiglottal tap a bilabial flap in Banda which may be an allophone of the labiodental flap and a velar lateral tap as an allophone in Kanite and Melpa These are often transcribed with the breve diacritic as w ʟ Note here that like a velar trill a central velar flap or tap is not possible because the tongue and soft palate cannot move together easily enough to produce a sound If other flaps are found the breve diacritic could be used to represent them but would more properly be combined with the symbol for the corresponding voiced stop A palatal or uvular tap or flap which unlike a velar tap is believed to be articulatorily possible could be represented this way by ɟ ɢ ʀ 11 Nasal taps and flaps Edit Nasalized consonants include taps and flaps although these are rarely phonemic Many West African languages have a nasal flap ɾ or n as an allophone of ɾ before a nasal vowel Pashto however has a phonemic nasal retroflex lateral flap citation needed Tapped fricatives Edit Voiced and voiceless tapped alveolar fricatives have been reported from a few languages Flapped fricatives are possible but do not seem to be used 12 See voiced alveolar tapped fricative voiceless alveolar tapped fricative See also EditList of phonetics topicsNotes Edit Ladefoged P 1975 1982 1993 A Course in Phonetics Harcourt Brace Jovanovich 1st 2nd amp 3rd editions Spajic Ladefoged amp Bhaskararao 1996 The Trills of Toda Journal of the International Phonetic Association 26 1 21 p 2 Olson K S amp Hajek J 2003 Crosslinguistic insights on the labial flap Linguistic Typology 7 157 186 Ladefoged P 1971 Preliminaries to Linguistic Phonetics Chicago The University of Chicago Press 1971 Moen et al 2003 The Articulation of the East Norwegian Apical Liquids ɭ ɾ ɽ Richard Strand The Sound System of kamvʹiri Report on the Kiel Convention Journal of the International Phonetic Association 19 2 p 70 Bickford amp Floyd 2006 Articulatory Phonetics Table 25 1 augmented by sources at the articles on individual consonants Phillips Donald 1976 Wahgi phonology and morphology Pacific Linguistics B issue 36 Ladefoged amp Maddieson 1996 p 243 The IPA has recommended ʀ but that could be confused with an extra short e g one contact trill ɢ is less ambiguous because articulatorily taps are extra short stops Laver 1994 Principles of Phonetics p 263 References EditLadefoged Peter Maddieson Ian 1996 The Sounds of the World s Languages Oxford Blackwell ISBN 978 0 631 19815 4 External links EditA Crosslinguistic Lexicon of the Labial Flap Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tap and flap consonants amp oldid 1126986117, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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