Voiced retroflex lateral flap

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Voiced retroflex lateral flap
𝼈
ɭ̆
ɺ̣
Audio sample
help
Encoding
Entity (decimal)𝼈
Unicode (hex)U+1DF08

The voiced retroflex lateral flap is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages. The 'implicit' symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet is 𝼈 .[1] The sound may also be transcribed as a short ɭ̆ , or with the retired IPA dot diacritic, ɺ̣.

Features

Features of the voiced retroflex lateral flap:

Occurrence

Language Word IPA Meaning Notes
Ilgar [
example needed
]
Contrasts /l, ɺ, ɭ, 𝼈 / and possibly /ʎ, ʎ̆/, though the last are likely underlying sequences of /lj, ɺj/.
Iwaidja [ŋa𝼈uli] 'my foot' Contrasts /l, ɺ, ɭ, 𝼈 / and possibly /ʎ, ʎ̆/, though the last are likely underlying sequences of /lj, ɺj/.
Kannada
ಕೇಳಿ
/Kēḷi
[keː𝼈i] 'to ask' Can be an approximant [ɭ ] instead.
Kobon ƚawƚ [𝼈aw𝼈 ] 'to shoot' Subapical.
Konkani
फळ/fāḷ
[fə𝼈 ] 'fruit'
Kresh[2] [
example needed
]
Malayalam
വേളി
/vēḷi
[veː𝼈i] 'marriage' Can be an approximant [ɭ ] instead.
Marathi केळी/Kēḷī [ke𝼈iː] 'bananas' See Marathi phonology
Irabu[3]
[paɨ𝼈 ] 'to pull'
Norwegian Trøndersk[4]
glas
[ˈɡɺ̠ɑːs] 'glass' Apical postalveolar;[4] also described as central [ɽ].[5] See Norwegian phonology
O'odham[6]
[
example needed
]
Apical postalveolar.[6]
Pashto[7][8]
ړوند/llund [𝼈und] 'blind' Contrasts plain and nasalized flaps.[7][8] Tend to be lateral at the beginning of a prosodic unit, and a central flap [ɽ] or approximant [ɻ ] elsewhere.
Tamil
குளி
/Kuḷi
[ˈku𝼈i] 'bathe' Allophone of /ɭ /. See Tamil phonology
Telugu
పెళ్ళి
/Pelli
[ˈpe𝼈i] 'Marriage' Allophone of /ɭ /. See
Telugu phonology
Tarahumara Western Rarámuri [
example needed
]
Often transcribed /𝼈 /.[9]
Totoli[10] [u𝼈aɡ] 'snake' Allophone of /ɺ/ after back vowels.[10]
Tukang Besi[11] [
example needed
]
Possible allophone of /l/ after back vowels, as well as an allophone of /r/.[11]
Wayuu[citation needed] llaa [𝼈áɨ𝼈aa] 'old man' postalveolar?
Zaghawa Chadian dialects Beri [be𝼈i] 'Zaghawa'

A retroflex lateral flap has been reported from various languages of

O'odham and Mohawk in the United States, Chaga in Tanzania, and Kanuri
in Nigeria.

Various

Masica describes the sound as widespread in the Indic languages of India:

A retroflex flapped lateral /ḷ/, contrasting with ordinary /l/, is a prominent feature of Odia, Marathi–Konkani, Gujarati, most varieties of Rajasthani and Bhili, Punjabi, some dialects of "Lahnda", ... most dialects of West Pahari, and Kumauni (not in the Southeastern dialect described by Apte and Pattanayak), as well as Hariyanvi and the Saharanpur subdialect of Northwestern Kauravi ("Vernacular Hindustani") investigated by Gumperz. It is absent from most other

NIA languages, including most Hindi dialects, Nepali, Garhwali, Bengali, Assamese, Kashmiri and other Dardic languages (except for the Dras dialect of Shina and possibly Khowar), the westernmost West Pahari dialects bordering Dardic (Bhalesi, Khashali, Rudhari, Padari) as well as the easternmost (Jaunsari, Sirmauri), and from Sindhi, Kacchi, and Siraiki. It was once present in Sinhalese, but in the modern language has merged with /l/.[14]

References

  1. ^ The substitution ɺ̢  may be used when 𝼈  cannot be displayed properly. The two are not canonically equivalent in Unicode. Miller, Kirk; Ashby, Michael (8 November 2020). "Unicode request for IPA modifier-letters (a), pulmonic" (PDF).
  2. .
  3. .
  4. ^
  5. ^ Heide, Eldar (2010), "Tjukk l – Retroflektert tydeleggjering av kort kvantitet. Om kvalitetskløyvinga av det gamle kvantitetssystemet.", Maal og Minne (in Norwegian), 1 (2010), Novus forlag: 3–44
  6. ^ .
  7. ^ .
  8. ^ a b Penzl, Herbert (1965). A reader of Pashto. p. 7.
  9. LCCN 84-051054
    . The voiced alveolar retroflexed lateral l is difficult for a non-native speaker to distinguish from the alveolar retroflexed vibrant r.
  10. ^ .
  11. ^
  12. .

External links