Voiceless uvular raised non-sonorant trill
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The voiceless uvular fricative is a type of consonantal sound used in some Speech communication, spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is , the Chi (letter)#Greek chi, Greek chi. The sound is represented by (ex with underdot) in Americanist phonetic notation. It is sometimes transcribed with (or , if Rhotic consonant, rhotic) in broad transcription. There is also a voiceless uvular fricative trill (a simultaneous and ) in some languages, e.g. Hebrew language, Hebrew and Wolof language, Wolof as well as in the northern and central varieties of European Spanish. It can be transcribed as (a Voicelessness, devoiced and Raised (phonetics), raised uvular trill) in IPA. It is found as either the fortis counterpart of (which itself is voiceless at least in Northern Standard Dutch language, Dutch: ) or the sole dorsal fricative in Northern SD and regional dialects and languages of the Netherlands (Dutch Low Saxon and West Frisian language, West Frisian) spoken above the rivers Rhine, Meuse and Waal (river), Waal (sometimes termed the Rotterdam–Nijmegen Line). A plain fricative that is articulated slightly further front, as either voiceless velar fricative, medio-velar or voiceless palatal fricative, post-palatal is typical of dialects spoken south of the rivers (mainly Brabantian dialect, Brabantian and Limburgish), including Belgian SD. In those dialects, the voiceless uvular fricative trill is one of the possible realizations of the phoneme .. have also found that frication is much more commonly in the velar region in dialects and language varieties with "hard G", though they do not distinguish between trilled and non-trilled fricatives in their study., cited in In fact, more languages claimed to have a voiceless uvular fricative may actually have a fricative trill. note that there is "a complication in the case of uvular fricatives in that the shape of the vocal tract may be such that the uvula vibrates." The frication in the fricative trill variant sometimes occurs at the middle or the back of the soft palate (termed ''velar'' or ''mediovelar'' and ''post-velar'', respectively), rather than the uvula itself. This is the case in Northern Standard Dutch as well as some varieties of Arabic language, Arabic, Limburgish and Madrid Spanish language, Spanish. It may thus be appropriate to call those variants voiceless (post)velar-uvular fricative trill as the trill component is always uvular (velar trills are not physically possible). The corresponding IPA symbol is (a devoiced, raised and Advanced (phonetics), advanced uvular trill, where the "advanced" diacritic applies only to the fricative portion of the sound). Thus, in cases where a dialectal variation between voiceless uvular and velar fricatives is claimed the main difference between the two may be the trilling of the uvula as frication can be velar in both cases - compare Northern Dutch ''acht'' 'eight' (with a postvelar-uvular fricative trill) with Southern Dutch or , which features a non-trilled fricative articulated at the middle or front of the soft palate. For a voiceless pre-uvular fricative (also called post-velar), see voiceless velar fricative.


Features

Features of the voiceless uvular fricative:


Occurrence


See also

* Index of phonetics articles * Voiced uvular fricative


Notes


References

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External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Voiceless Uvular Fricative Fricative consonants Uvular consonants Pulmonic consonants Voiceless oral consonants Central consonants