The ringing alveolar affricata is a consonant sound found in a number of languages. The MFA is transcribed as ⟨d͡z⟩, ⟨d͜z⟩ or ⟨ʣ⟩ .
| Ringing alveolar affricata | |
|---|---|
| ʣ | |
| MFA number | 104 (133) |
| Unicode (hex) | U + 2A3 |
| HTML (decimal) | & # 100; & # 865; & # 122; |
| X-SAMPA | dz |
| Kirshenbaum | dz |
| Other designations | ʣ d͜z |
Content
Articulating characteristics
- According to the method of formation - an affricate , which is a continuous pronouncing of the occlusal consonant, followed by a fricative opening.
- According to the place of formation, the alveolar consonant is pronounced with the front of the tongue raised to the alveoli .
- By type of phonation , a voiced consonant in which there are vibrations of the vocal cords.
- By type of formation of air flow - pulmonary consonant, pronounced with the help of air flow from the lungs .
Spread
This sound is found in the languages of the Caucasian family ( Abkhaz , Adygei , Georgian , etc.), Indo-European family ( Armenian , Belarusian , Greek , Lithuanian , Latvian , Ossetian , Polish , Pashto , Slovak , Ukrainian , Czech ).
See also
- Affricate
- Ringing dental affricata
Literature
- Kodzasov, S.V., and O.F. Krivnov. General phonetics. - M .: RGGU, 2001.