Labio-palatalization

Type of secondary articular language From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A labio-palatalized sound is one that is simultaneously labialized and palatalized. Typically the roundedness is compressed, like [y], rather than protruded like [u]. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet for this secondary articulation is , a superscript ɥ, the symbol for the labialized palatal approximant. If such sounds pattern with other, labialized, consonants, they may instead be transcribed as palatalized consonants plus labialization, ʷ, as with the [sʲʷ] = [sᶣ] of Abkhaz or the [nʲʷ] = [nᶣ] of Akan and Siberian Ingrian Finnish.

Entity (decimal)ᶣ
Unicode (hex)U+1DA3
Quick facts ◌ᶣ, ◌ʲʷ ...
Labio-palatalized
◌ᶣ
◌ʲʷ
Encoding
Entity (decimal)ᶣ
Unicode (hex)U+1DA3
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A voiced labialized palatal approximant [ɥ] occurs in Mandarin Chinese and French, but elsewhere is uncommon, as it is generally dependent upon the presence of front rounded vowels such as [ø] and [y], which are themselves not common.[1] However, a labialized palatal approximant and labio-palatalized consonants appear in some languages without front rounded vowels in the Caucasus and in West Africa,[2] such as Abkhaz, and as allophones of labialized consonants before /i/, including the [tsᶣ] at the beginning of the language name Twi. In Russian, /o/ and /u/ trigger labialization of any preceding consonant, including palatalized consonants, so that нёс 'he carried' is phonetically [nᶣɵs].

Languages with labio-palatalization

Labial–palatal consonants

Truly co-articulated labial–palatal consonants such as [p͡c, b͡ɟ, m͡ɲ] are theoretically possible.[4] They might even be expected as allophones of labialvelar consonants before front vowels. However, the closest sounds attested from the world's languages are the labial–postalveolar consonants of Yélî Dnye in New Guinea, which are sometimes transcribed as labial–palatals.[citation needed]

List of labio-palatalized consonants

More information type, Phone ...
type Phone IPA Languages
Stops labio-palzd voiceless bilabial stop [pᶣ] Siberian Ingrian Finnish
labio-palzd voiced bilabial stop [bᶣ] Siberian Ingrian Finnish
labio-palzd voiceless alveolar stop [tᶣ] Ndau, Siberian Ingrian Finnish (may also be geminate)
labio-palzd voiced alveolar stop [dᶣ] Siberian Ingrian Finnish
labio-palzd voiceless velar stop [kᶣ] Siberian Ingrian Finnish (may also be geminate), Kukuya
labio-palzd voiced velar stop [ɡᶣ] Siberian Ingrian Finnish
Affricates labio-palzd voiceless alveolo-palatal affricate [tɕᶣ] Akan (allophone of /kʷ/ before front vowels), Kukuya
labio-palzd voiced alveolo-palatal affricate [dʑᶣ] Akan (allophone of /ɡʷ/ before front vowels), Kukuya (prenasalized)
Fricatives labio-palzd voiceless labiodental fricative [fᶣ]
labio-palzd voiced labiodental fricative [vᶣ] Siberian Ingrian Finnish
labio-palzd voiceless alveolar sibilant [sᶣ] Siberian Ingrian Finnish (may also be geminate)
labio-palzd voiced alveolar sibilant [zᶣ]
labio-palzd voiceless palato-alveolar fricative [ʃᶣ] Abkhaz
labio-palzd voiced palato-alveolar fricative [ʒᶣ] Abkhaz
labio-palzd voiceless alveolo-palatal fricative [ɕᶣ] Akan (allophone of /hʷ/ before front vowels), Kukuya
labio-palzd voiced alveolo-palatal fricative [ʑᶣ] Kukuya
labio-palzd voiceless velar fricative [xᶣ] Siberian Ingrian Finnish
labio-palzd voiced velar fricative [ɣᶣ] Mfumte (prenasalized [ŋɣᶣ])
labio-palzd voiceless glottal fricative [hᶣ] Mfumte (may also be prenasalized)
Nasals labio-palzd bilabial nasal [mᶣ] Siberian Ingrian Finnish
labio-palzd alveolar nasal [nᶣ] Siberian Ingrian Finnish
labio-palzd palatal nasal [ɲᶣ] Akan (allophone of /nʷ/ before front vowels; may also be geminate)
Trills labio-palzd alveolar trill [rᶣ] Ndau
Approximants labio-palzd alveolar lateral approximant [lᶣ] Siberian Ingrian Finnish (may also be geminate)
labio-palzd alveolar approximant [ɹᶣ] Siberian Ingrian Finnish
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See also

References

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