Voiced palatal affricate

Consonantal sound From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The voiced palatal affricate is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages. The symbols in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represent this sound are ɟ͡ʝ and ɟ͜ʝ, and the equivalent X-SAMPA symbol is J\_j\. The tie bar may be omitted, yielding ɟʝ in the IPA and J\j\ in X-SAMPA.

Quick Facts ɟʝ, IPA number ...
Voiced palatal affricate
ɟʝ
IPA number108 (139)
Audio sample
Encoding
Entity (decimal)ɟ͡ʝ
Unicode (hex)U+025FU+0361U+029D
X-SAMPAJ\_j\
Close

This sound is the non-sibilant equivalent of the voiced alveolo-palatal affricate.

It occurs in languages such as Albanian, and Skolt Sami, among others. The voiced palatal affricate is quite rare; it is mostly absent from Europe as a phoneme (it occurs as an allophone in most Spanish dialects), with the aforementioned Uralic languages and Albanian being exceptions. It usually occurs with its voiceless counterpart, the voiceless palatal affricate.

Features

Features of the voiced palatal affricate:

Occurrence

More information Language, Word ...
Language Word IPA Meaning Notes
Albanian Standard[1] gjë [ɟ͡ʝə] 'thing'
Asturian Western dialects[2] muyyer [muˈɟ͡ʝeɾ] 'woman' Alternate evolution of -lj-, -c'l-, pl-, cl- and fl- in the Brañas Vaqueiras area of Western Asturias. May be also realized as [c] or [c͡ç]
Makassarese[3] jarang [ˈɟ͡ʝa.rãŋ] 'horse' Phonemicized as /ɟ/.
Norwegian Central and Western dialects[4] leggja [leɟ͡ja] 'lay' See Norwegian phonology
Skolt Sami vuõˊlǧǧem [vʲuɘlɟ͡ʝːɛm] 'I leave' Contrasts with [d͡ʒ], [ʒ] and [ʝ]. See Skolt Sami language
Spanish Castilian[5] yate [ˈɟ͡jate̞] 'yacht' Occurs only in the onset. In free variation with the fricative/approximant /ʝ/ elsewhere. See Spanish phonology
Close

See also

Notes

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.