Voiced alveolo-palatal affricate

Consonantal sound From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A voiced alveolo-palatal sibilant affricate is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages. The symbols in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represent this sound are d͡ʑ, d͜ʑ. The tie bar may be omitted, yielding . There is also a ligature ʥ, which has been retired by the International Phonetic Association but is still used. Occasionally the stop component is transcribed ɟ.[citation needed] An older transcription that indicated approximately the same sound was .

Entity (decimal)ʥ
Unicode (hex)U+02A5
Quick facts dʑ, ʥ ...
Voiced alveolo-palatal affricate
ʥ
ɟʑ
IPA number216
Audio sample
Encoding
Entity (decimal)ʥ
Unicode (hex)U+02A5
X-SAMPAd_z\
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d is a broad transcription of the stop component, which can be narrowly transcribed as d̠ʲ (retracted and palatalized [d]). There is also a para-IPA letter ȡ. Therefore, narrow transcriptions include d̠ʲʑ and ȡʑ. However, this is not normally done because the stop component is by default assumed to be homorganic with the fricative component of the consonant.

[dʑ] is the sibilant equivalent of a voiced palatal affricate.

Features

Features of a voiced alveolo-palatal affricate:

Occurrence

More information Language, Word ...
LanguageWordIPAMeaningNotes
Bengaliখন[ˈd͡ʑɔkʰon]'when'Contrasts aspirated form. See Bengali phonology
Burmeseဂျင်[d͡ʑɪ̀ɰ̃]'top (toy)'
Catalan[1]All dialectsmitjà[mɪ(d)ˈd͡ʑä]'medium'See Catalan phonology
Valencianjoc[ˈd͡ʑɔk]'game'
ChineseSouthern Min / ji̍t[d͡ʑit̚˧ʔ]'sun'
Wu[d͡ʑy]'he/she/it'
IrishSome dialects[2][3][4]dearg[ˈd͡ʑaɾˠəɡ]'red'Realization of the palatalized alveolar stop /dʲ/ in dialects such as Erris, Teelin and Tourmakeady.[2][3][4] See Irish phonology
Japanese知人 / chijin[t͡ɕid͡ʑĩ́ɴ]'acquaintance'Also transcribed as /ʑ/. See Japanese phonology
Kalmykчееҗ / cheej[t͡ɕeːd͡ʑə̟́]'chest'
KazakhSome speakersжер / jer[d͡ʑe̘r̥]'land'Often realized as /ʒ/. See Kazakh phonology
KoreanSouth편지 / pyeonji[pʰjʌ̹ːnd͡ʑi]'letter'See Korean phonology
KyrgyzSome speakersжок / jok[d͡ʑo̞q]'no'Typically postalveolar /dʒ/. See Kyrgyz phonology
Malay Jambi توجوه / tujuh [tud͡ʑʊh] 'seven' See Jambi Malay
Okinawanfijeetiinagaa[ɸid͡ʑeːtiːnagaː]'thief'
Polish[5]więk[d͡ʑvʲɛŋk]'sound'See Polish phonology
RomanianBanat dialect[6]des[d͡ʑes]'frequent'Allophone of /d/ before front vowels. Corresponds to [d] in standard Romanian. See Romanian phonology
Russianдочь бы[ˈd̪o̞d͡ʑ bɨ]'daughter would'Allophone of /t͡ɕ/ before voiced consonants. See Russian phonology
Sema[7]aji[à̠d͡ʑì]'blood'Possible allophone of /ʒ/ before /i, e/; can be realized as [ʑ ~ ʒ ~ d͡ʒ] instead.[7]
Serbo-Croatian[8][9]ђаво / đavo[d͡ʑâ̠ʋo̞ː]'devil'Merges with /d͡ʒ/ in Kajkavian and Chakavian dialects. See Serbo-Croatian phonology
Swedish[10][11]djur[d͡ʑʉːr]'animal'Allophone of /j/ in initial position in older Standard Swedish, Norrbotten and Finland
Uzbek[12]Some speakersjon[d͡ʑɒ̽n]'dear'Typically postalveolar /dʒ/. See Uzbek phonology
XumiLower[13][d͡ʑɐʔ˦]'water'
Upper[14][d͡ʑɐ̝˦]
Yi / jji[d͡ʑi˧]'bee'
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See also

Notes

References

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