Fricative consonant voiced dental consonant
The fricative consonant voiced dental consonant is a consonant sound rather not very frequent in the spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet is. This symbol is that of the Scandinavian Latin letter tiny Edh and resembles a D tiny oblique barred.
Characteristics
Here characteristics of the fricative consonant voiced dental consonant:- Its mode of articulation is fricative, which means that it is produced by contracting the air through a narrow gauge railway at the joint, causing turbulence.
- Its joint is dental consonant, which means that it is articulated with the language on the lower or higher teeth, or both.
- Its phonation is voiced, which means that the vocal cords vibrate at the time of the articulation.
- It is a oral Consonne, which means that the air does not escape that by the mouth.
- It is a central Consonne, which means that it is produced by letting the air pass above the medium of the language, rather than by the sides.
- Its mechanism of draft is égressif pulmonary, which means that it is articulated by pushing the air by the lungs and through the channel vocatoire, rather than by the glottis or the mouth.
In French
French does not have this sound.
Other languages
The English has this sound which is written HT (this digraph can also decide). In Old English, this sound was written with the letter thorn (þ) or with the eth (2D), interchangeable letters with the [θ].The Icelandic preserved the letter 2D to write this sound. The Albanian the writing dh , the Welsh dd , and the Same of North đ.
In Castilian, it is noted " z" between vowels; it there is also found, at the residual state, in the words finished by voyelle+d: Madrid.
See too
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