- This
article contains phonetic transcriptions in the
International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA). For an
introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA. For...
- of
clicks in
Ekoka !Kung have been
variously described as
retroflex or
fricated palatal clicks.
Bilabial click Dental click Lateral click Palatal click...
- a noisy,
fricated release which derive historically from more
prototypical palatal clicks.
These have been
variously described as
fricated alveolar clicks...
-
rather than a
lateral click.
Fricated palatal click (described as
having a
lateral release)
Retroflex click (has a
fricated lateral release)
Styled as either...
-
remain in
Central ǃKung. In ǀʼAkhwe (Ekoka), the
palatal click has
become a
fricated alveolar. ǃKung
lemmas (Wiktionary) For
phonology and tones, see list of...
- Vedder's and Anders' ⟨⦀⟩. For a
while Amanda Miller, who
noted a
lateral fricated release (as had Vedder),
transcribed them ⟨ǃ𐞷⟩.)
Retroflex clicks are...
- Juǀʼhoansi. However, the
series of
palatal clicks have a
fricated lateral release (see
fricated palatal clicks).
These are
provisionally transcribed ⟨𝼋⟩...
-
advanced than in
other states. Some
dialects of
Australian English feature a
fricated /t/ in
certain contexts, such as in
words like
beautiful and great. In...
- abrĩ 'I have' waabrṍ 'I am unable' The
dentalveolar obstruents are
often fricated: the
ejective always (though it has
other sources as well), and the other...
- with a superscript. However, this
convention is more
typically used for a
fricated release that is too
brief to be
considered a true affricate.
Though they...