Voiced labiodental fricative
Consonantal sound represented by ⟨v⟩ in IPA
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A voiced labiodental fricative is a type of consonantal sound used in some spoken languages. It is familiar to English-speakers as the "v" sound in "vase". The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is ⟨v⟩.
| Voiced labiodental fricative | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| v | |||
| IPA number | 129 | ||
| Audio sample | |||
| Encoding | |||
| Entity (decimal) | v | ||
| Unicode (hex) | U+0076 | ||
| X-SAMPA | v | ||
| Braille | |||
| |||
The sound is similar to voiced alveolar fricative /z/ in that it is familiar to most European speakers[citation needed] but is a fairly uncommon sound cross-linguistically, occurring in approximately 21.1% of languages.[1] Moreover, most languages that have /z/ also have /v/ and similarly to /z/, the overwhelming majority of languages with [v] are languages of Europe, Africa, or Western Asia, although the similar labiodental approximant /ʋ/ is also common in India. The presence of [v] and absence of [w], is a very distinctive areal feature of European languages and those of adjacent areas of Siberia and Central Asia.[citation needed] Speakers of East Asian languages that lack this sound may pronounce it as [b] (Korean and Japanese), or [f]/[w] (Cantonese and Mandarin), and thus be unable to distinguish between a number of English minimal pairs.[citation needed]
In certain languages, such as Danish,[2] Faroese,[3] Icelandic or Norwegian[4] the voiced labiodental fricative is in a free variation with the labiodental approximant.
Features
Features of a voiced labiodental fricative:
- Its manner of articulation is fricative, which means it is produced by constricting air flow through a narrow channel at the place of articulation, causing turbulence.
- Its place of articulation is labiodental, which means it is articulated with the lower lip and the upper teeth.
- Its phonation is voiced, which means the vocal cords vibrate during the articulation.
- It is an oral consonant, which means that air is not allowed to escape through the nose.
- Because the sound is not produced with airflow over the tongue, the median–lateral dichotomy does not apply.
- Its airstream mechanism is pulmonic, which means it is articulated by pushing air only with the intercostal muscles and abdominal muscles, as in most sounds.
Occurrence
| Language | Word | IPA | Meaning | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abkhaz | европа[romanization needed] | [evˈropʼa] | 'Europe' | See Abkhaz phonology | |
| Adyghe | жъвэ / ẑvă | [ʐvɜ] | 'oar' | ||
| Afrikaans | wees | [vɪəs] | 'to be' | See Afrikaans phonology | |
| Albanian | valixhe | [vaˈlidʒɛ] | 'case' | ||
| Arabic | Algerian[5] | كاڥي[romanization needed] | [kavi] | 'ataxy' | See Arabic phonology |
| Hejazi | فيروس[romanization needed] | [vajˈruːs] | 'virus' | Only used in loanwords, transcribed and pronounced as [f] by many speakers. | |
| Siirt[5] | ذهب[romanization needed] | [vaˈhab] | 'gold' | See Arabic phonology | |
| Armenian | Eastern[6] | վեց / vecʼ | ⓘ | 'six' | |
| Assyrian | ܟܬܒ̣ܐ / ctava | [ctaːva] | 'book' | Only in the Urmia dialects. [ʋ] is also predominantly used. Corresponds to [w] in the other varieties. | |
| Bai | Dali | ? | [ŋv˩˧] | 'fish' | |
| Bulgarian | вода / voda | [voda] | 'water' | See Bulgarian phonology | |
| Catalan | Alguerese[7] | vell | [ˈveʎ] | 'old' | See Catalan phonology |
| Balearic[8][7] | |||||
| Southern Catalonia[9] | |||||
| Valencian[9][7] | |||||
| Chechen | вашa / vaşa | [vaʃa] | 'brother' | ||
| Chinese | Wu | 饭 / ⁶vae | [vɛ] | 'cooked rice' | |
| Sichuanese | 五 / wu³ | [vu˥˧] | 'five' | Corresponds to /w/ in standard Mandarin. | |
| Czech | voda | [ˈvodä] | 'water' | See Czech phonology | |
| Chichewa[10] | [example needed] | Has both plain and labialized.[11] | |||
| Danish | Standard[12] | véd | [ve̝ːˀð̠˕ˠ] | 'know(s)' | Most often an approximant [ʋ].[2] See Danish phonology |
| Dutch | All dialects | wraak | [vraːk] | 'revenge' | Allophone of /ʋ/ before /r/. See Dutch phonology |
| Most dialects | vreemd | [vreːmt] | 'strange' | Often devoiced to [f] by speakers from the Netherlands. See Dutch phonology | |
| Standard[13] | |||||
| English | All dialects | valve | ⓘ | 'valve' | See English phonology |
| African American[14] | breathe | [bɹiːv] | 'breathe' | Does not occur word-initially. See th-fronting | |
| Cockney[15] | [bɹəi̯v] | ||||
| Esperanto | vundo | [ˈvundo] | 'wound' | See Esperanto phonology | |
| Ewe[16] | evlo | [évló] | 'he is evil' | ||
| Faroese[3] | veður | [ˈveːʋuɹ] | 'speech' | Word-initial allophone of /v/, in free variation with an approximant [ʋ].[3] See Faroese phonology | |
| French[17] | valve | [valv] | 'valve' | See French phonology | |
| Georgian[18] | ვიწრო[romanization needed] | [ˈvitsʼɾo] | 'narrow' | ||
| German | Wächter | [ˈvɛçtɐ] | 'guard' | See Standard German phonology | |
| Greek | βερνίκι / verníki | [ve̞rˈnici] | 'varnish' | See Modern Greek phonology | |
| Hebrew | גב[romanization needed] | [ɡav] | 'back' | See Modern Hebrew phonology | |
| Hindi[19] | व्रत[romanization needed] | [vrət̪] | 'fast' | See Hindustani phonology | |
| Hmong | 𖬖𖬰𖬜 / vaj | [va˥˨] | 'king', 'vang clan last name' | ||
| Hungarian | veszély | [vɛseːj] | 'danger' | See Hungarian phonology | |
| Irish | bhaile | [vaːlə] | 'home' | See Irish phonology | |
| Italian[20] | avare | [aˈvare] | 'miserly' (f. pl.) | See Italian phonology | |
| Judaeo-Spanish | mueve | [ˈmwɛvɛ] | 'nine' | ||
| Kabardian | вагъуэ / vağue / ۋاغوە | ⓘ | 'star' | Corresponds to [ʒʷ] in Adyghe | |
| Macedonian | вода / voda | [vɔda] | 'water' | See Macedonian phonology | |
| Malayalam | വിയർപ്പ് / viyarpp` | [vijɐɾpɨ̆] | 'sweat' | Usually pronounced as /ʋ/ by most speakers. See Malayalam phonology | |
| Maltese | iva | [iva] | 'yes' | ||
| Norwegian | Urban East[4] | venn | [ve̞nː] | 'friend' | Allophone of /ʋ/ before a pause and in emphatic speech.[4] See Norwegian phonology |
| Occitan | Auvergnat | vol | [vɔl] | 'flight' | See Occitan phonology |
| Limousin | |||||
| Provençal | |||||
| Persian | Western | ورزش[romanization needed] | [værzeʃ] | 'sport' | See Persian phonology |
| Polish[21] | wór | ⓘ | 'bag' | See Polish phonology | |
| Portuguese[22] | vila | [ˈvilɐ] | 'town', 'village' | See Portuguese phonology | |
| Romanian | val | [väl] | 'wave' | See Romanian phonology | |
| Russian[23][24] | волосы / volosy | [ˈvʷo̞ɫ̪əs̪ɨ̞] | 'hair' | Contrasts with palatalized form. May be a lenited fricative [v̞] or an approximant [ʋ] instead.[24] See Russian phonology | |
| Scottish Gaelic | a-bhos | [əˈvɔs̪] | 'over here' | Loosely articulated, can resemble [β]. See Scottish Gaelic phonology | |
| Serbo-Croatian | voda | [vɔ'da] | 'water' | See Serbo-Croatian phonology | |
| Slovak[25] | vzrast | [vzräst] | 'height' | Appears only in syllable onset before voiced obstruents; the usual realization of /v/ is an approximant [ʋ].[25] See Slovak phonology | |
| Slovene[26] | Standard | filozof gre | [filoˈz̪ôːv ˈɡɾěː] | 'philosopher goes' | Allophone of /f/ before voiced consonants.[26] See Slovene phonology |
| Some dialects | voda | [ˈvɔ̀ːd̪á] | 'water' | Instead of /ʋ/. See Slovene phonology | |
| Spanish[27][28] | All dialects | afgano | [ävˈɣ̞äno̞] | 'Afghan' | Allophone of /f/ before voiced consonants. See Spanish phonology |
| Chilean[29] | nuevo | [ˈnwevo̞] | 'new' | Allophone of /b/; pronounced as [β] in other dialects. | |
| Swedish | vägg | [ˈvɛɡː] | 'wall' | See Swedish phonology | |
| Turkish[30] | vade | [väːˈd̪ɛ] | 'due date' | The main allophone of /v/; realized as bilabial [β ~ β̞] in certain contexts.[30] See Turkish phonology | |
| Tamil | வார்த்தை[romanization needed] | [vaːɾt̪ɐi̯] | 'word' | See Tamil phonology | |
| Tyap | vak | [vag] | 'road' | ||
| Umbundu[31] | [example needed] | Has both plain and nasalized.[31] | |||
| Urdu | ورزش[romanization needed] | [vəɾzɪʃ] | 'exercise' | See Hindustani phonology | |
| Vietnamese[32] | và | [vaː˨˩] | 'and' | In southern dialects, is in free variation with [j]. See Vietnamese phonology | |
| West Frisian | weevje | [ˈʋeɪ̯vjə] | 'to weave' | Never occurs in word-initial positions. See West Frisian phonology | |
| Welsh | fi | [vi] | 'I' | See Welsh phonology | |
| Yi | ꃶ / vu | [vu˧] | 'intestines' | ||
