Voiceless alveolar lateral fricative

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IPA – number 148
IPA – text ɬ
IPA – image {{{imagesize}}}
Entity ɬ
X-SAMPA K
Kirshenbaum s<lat>
Sound sample 

The voiceless alveolar lateral fricative is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents voiceless dental, alveolar, and postalveolar fricatives is ɬ, and the equivalent X-SAMPA symbol is K. The symbol ɬ is called "belted l" and should not be confused with "l with tilde", [ɫ], which corresponds to a different sound, the velarized alveolar lateral approximant. It should also be distinguished from a voiceless alveolar lateral approximant, although the fricative is sometimes incorrectly described as a "voiceless l", a description fitting only of the approximant. The sound is relatively rare among the world's languages, but common among Native American languages, such as Navajo. [1] Welsh is perhaps the best-known example of a language with this sound [2] (it is indicated in Welsh orthography with a doubled "l").

Contents

Features

Features of the voiceless alveolar lateral fricative:

Occurrence

Language Word IPA Meaning Notes
Ahtna dzeł [tsəɬ] 'mountain'
Aleut Atkan dialect hla [ɬɑ] 'boy'
Avar лъабго [ˈɬabgo] 'three'
Dahalo [ʡáɬi] 'fat'
Cantonese Taishan dialect thlaam [ɬam˧] 'three'
Chickasaw lhinko [ɬinko] 'to be fat'
Chukchi левыт [ɬeβət] 'head'
Eyak qe'ł [qʰɛʔɬ] 'woman'
Fali [paɬkan] 'shoulder'
Greenlandic illu [iɬːu] 'house'
Hadza [ɬɛmeja] 'man'
Haida tla'únhl [tɬʰʌʔʊ́nɬ] 'six'
Hmong hli [ɬi] 'moon'
Inuktitut example needed -- -- See Inuit phonology
Kabardian плъы [pɬɛ] 'to look'
Kaska tsį̄ł [tsʰĩːɬ] 'axe'
Navajo ł [ɬaʔ] 'little' See Navajo phonology
Norwegian Trønder dialect tatjl [taɬ] 'sissyness'
Sandawe [ɬáː] 'goat'
Sassarese moltu [ˈmɔɬtu] 'dead'
Sesotho ho hlahloba [ho ɬɑɬɔbɑ] 'to examine' See Sesotho phonology
St’át’imcets lhésp [ɬə́sp] 'rash'
Taos [ɬìˈwēnæ] 'wife' See Taos phonology
Tsez лъи [ɬi] 'water'
Welsh llwyd [ɬʊɪd] 'grey'
Nosu Yi ? [ɬo˧˩bo˧] 'moon'
Zulu isihlahla [isiˈɬaːɬa] 'tree'
Zuni astemlhan [ʔastemɬan] 'ten'

Semitic languages

The sound is conjectured as a phoneme for Proto-Semitic, usually transcribed as ś; it has evolved into Arabic [ʃ], Hebrew, [s]:

Proto-Semitic Akkadian Arabic Phoenician Hebrew Aramaic Ge'ez
ś ش š š š שׂ s שׂ s ś

Amongst Semitic languages, the sound still exists in contemporary Soqotri[citation needed]. In Ge'ez, it is written with the letter Śawt[citation needed].

References

  1. ^ Laver, John (1994). Principles of Phonetics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 052145655X. 
  2. ^ Ladefoged, Peter (1996). The Sounds of the World's Languages. Oxford: Blackwell, page 203. ISBN 0631198156. 

See also

This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.


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