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Gheada (IPA: [ħeˈaðɐ]) is a term in
Galician to
describe the
debuccalisation of the
voiced velar stop /ɡ/ to a,
usually voiceless, back fricative, most...
-
noteworthy dialectal features,
among other phenomenons:
emergence of the
gheada or
pronunciation of /ɡ/ as a
pharyngeal fricative;
denasalization of nasal...
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before e, i, y /ʒ/
Before e, i, y
Galician /ɡ/ ~ /ħ/
Except before e, i, see
Gheada for
consonant variation /ʃ/
Before e, i, obsolete,
replaced by ⟨x⟩ Gr****...
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sometimes [x] in weak positions).
According to others, it is
glottal [ɦ].
Gheada Borrowed from
Arabic and
Hebrew It's
unclear if [h] is a
separate phoneme...
- D de /de/ /d/ E e /ɛ/ /e/, /ɛ/ F efe /ˈɛfe̝/ /f/ G gue /ɡe/ /ɡ/ (/x/ in
gheada zones) H
hache /ˈat͡ʃe̝/
silent I i /i/ /i/, /j/ L ele /ˈɛle̝/ /l/ M eme...
- both
demonstrate the two main
regional speech phenomena of the language,
gheada and seseo, and are
realized as [ɡaˈliθ(j)ɐ] in the east, [ħaˈliθ(j)ɐ] more...
- [g] in some dialects. May be also
realized as [ɦ, ʕ, x, χ, ʁ, ɡʰ]. See
gheada.
Georgian ჰავა/hava [hɑvɑ] 'climate'
German H**** [has] 'hatred' See Standard...
- 'cat'
Corresponds to /ɡ/ in
other dialects. See
Galician phonology and
gheada Hebrew Mizrahi חַשְׁמַל/ḥašmal [ħaʃˈmal] 'electricity'
Merged with [χ] for...
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represents /dʒ/. In Galician, it is
often used to
represent the
pronunciation of
gheada. In Irish, ⟨gh⟩
represents /ɣ/ (the
voiced velar fricative) and /j/ (the...
- well as in Galician-influenced Spanish, the
phoneme /ɡ/ may
debuccalize (
gheada) to [ħ] in most or all instances; [x] and [h] are also
possible realizations...