Interproximal sound
- Tuning part
-
- Labial
- Bilabial
- Labiodental sound
- Tongue top sound
Apical / tip of the tongue sound - Tongue labial
- Interproximal sound
- Dental consonant
- Alveolar consonant
- Rear alveolar consonant
- Cacuminal
- Gums hard palatal
- Dorsum of tongue sound
- Hard palatal
- Velar sound
- Uvular
- Throat sound
- Pharyngeal
- Epiglottis sound
- Voice
- Double tuning
- Both lips hard palatal
- Both lips velar sound
- Rear gums velar sound
- ▶ Tuning method
The interproximal sound (しかんおん British: interdental consonant) is the consonant which is attuned by putting a lip service edge between the top and lower front teeth. This is different from the dental consonant articulated by a tongue in "the other side" of the upper incisor (front tooth).
If accuracy is necessary, the interproximal sound is referred to using the bridge of the cock-up like ⟨[n̪͆t̪͆d̪͆θ̪͆ð̪͆r̪͆l̪͆ɬ̪͆ɮ̪͆]⟩ with bottom, but what copy these sounds as in front of close alveolar consonant like ⟨[n̟t̟d̟θ̟ð̟r̟l̟ɬ̟ɮ̟]⟩ is more common.
The interproximal sound is common to a language and is rare. The realization as the interproximal sound of other dental consonants or the alveolar consonant is possible as a coarticulation effect of as specificity or the near interproximal sound (an individual, a group, the area). The interproximal sound to occur most commonly is 非歯擦摩擦音 (the sibilant may become the dental consonant, but does not appear as an interproximal sound). The interproximal sound is not compared with the dental consonant in any kind of language to become at first glance either.
Vocal sound and silent interproximal fricative [ð̟,θ̟] emerge for American English as a start sound of the word such as "then" and "thin". In British English, these consonants are strong in a tendency to become dental consonant [ð,θ].
There is interproximal sound [l̟] in some varieties of Italian. There is it in some English varieties, but distribution and the use of interproximal sound [l̟] in English are not clear.
The interproximal approximant is seen in カガヤネン word () (マノボ group of a language family ), カラガ Mandaean () (マンサカン group of a language family ), empty cancer word () (マンサカン group of a language family), southern カタンドゥアネス state biThor word (), much Philippines languages including some varieties of the カリンガ word () [1].
There is interproximal sound [ɮ̟] in some dialects of the net word.
In most Australian languages, th, nh, a series of dental consonants written as lh (by some languages) exist. These are always tip of the tongue sounds (i.e., I am created by letting a tip of the tongue contact it), but can create it by three kinds of different methods whether a speaker pronounces a language and a speaker, this sound with care to a cuttlefish. Tip of the tongue interproximal sound [t̺͆/d̺͆n̺͆l̺͆]; that the tip of the tongue sees these from between a tooth (seen in th in American English) Tip of the tongue interproximal sound [t̻͆/d̻͆n̻͆l̻͆]; to put the tip of the tongue behind a lower tooth to see "a tip of the tongue" from between a tooth It is tooth - alveolar consonant (denti-alveolar) [t̻̪/d̻̪n̻̪l̻̪] letting tip of the tongue and both tips of the tongue touch an upper tooth and the other side of the gums seen in French t, d, n, l.
Footnote
- ^ Machlan, Glenn and Olson, Kenneth S. and Amangao, Nelson. 2008. "Minangali (Kalinga) digital wordlist: presentation form". Language Documentation and Conservation 2, 141-156.
References
- Ladefoged, Peter; Maddieson, Ian (1996). The Sounds of the World's Languages. Oxford: Blackwell. ISBN 0-631-19814-8.
Allied item
This article is taken from the Japanese Wikipedia Interproximal sound
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