Voiced alveolar side beaten consonant
The voiced alveolar side beaten consonant is a not very frequent consonant sound in the spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet is. This symbol represents one lengthened reversed. In the API one, represents it a rolled and it a spirante.
Characteristics
Here characteristics of the voiced alveolar side beaten consonant:- Its mode of articulation is beaten, which means that it is produced by briefly contracting the muscles of a joint, on the other.
- Its joint is alveolar, which means that it is articulated with either the point ( apical ) or the blade ( laminal ) of the language against the alveolar peak.
- 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 side Consonne, which means that it is produced by letting the air pass on the two sides of the language, rather than in the medium.
- 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 it.
Other languages
In Japanese, the R one is beaten side. This consonant would be very common in the languages which do not distinguish the L and the {{APIb|ɾ}}This consonant is deferred very little because the linguists of European languages often do not manage to recognize it.
See too
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