Voiced dental and alveolar plosives
The voiced alveolar, dental and postalveolar plosives (or stops) are types of consonantal sounds used in many spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents voiced dental, alveolar, and postalveolar plosives is ⟨d⟩ (although the symbol ⟨d̪⟩ can be used to distinguish the dental plosive, and ⟨d̠⟩ the postalveolar), and the equivalent X-SAMPA symbol is d
.
Voiced alveolar plosive | |
---|---|
d | |
IPA Number | 104 |
Audio sample | |
source · help | |
Encoding | |
Entity (decimal) | d |
Unicode (hex) | U+0064 |
X-SAMPA | d |
Braille |
Voiced dental plosive | |
---|---|
d̪ | |
IPA Number | 104 408 |
Audio sample | |
source · help | |
Encoding | |
Entity (decimal) | d̪ |
Unicode (hex) | U+0064 U+032A |
X-SAMPA | d_d |
Braille |
There are only a few languages which distinguishes dental and alveolar stops, Kota, Toda, Venda and some Irish dialects being a few of them.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.