Voiced retroflex affricate

The voiced retroflex sibilant affricate is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is ͡ʐ, sometimes simplified to , and the equivalent X-SAMPA symbol is dz`. Its apical variant is ɖ̺͡ʐ̺ and laminal variant ɖ̻͡ʐ̻. It occurs in such languages as Polish (the laminal affricate ) and Northwest Caucasian languages (apical).

Voiced retroflex affricate
ɖʐ
IPA Number106 (137)
Audio sample
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Encoding
Entity (decimal)ɖ͡ʐ
Unicode (hex)U+0256U+0361U+0290
X-SAMPAdz`

Features

Features of the voiced retroflex affricate:

Occurrence

LanguageWordIPAMeaningNotes
Asturian Some dialects ḷḷuna ['ɖ͡ʐunä] 'moon' Corresponds to /ʎ/ in other dialects. See Che Vaqueira
Belarusianджаз[ɖ͡ʐas]'jazz'Laminal. See Belarusian phonology
ChineseWu[ɖ͡ʐaŋ]'to grow'Only found in a few Wu dialects.
Some Mandarin speakers广州[kwaŋ˨˩ ɖ͡ʐoʊ˥˥]'Guangzhou'
Khowar[1]ݮـنـݮـیر[ɖ͡ʐanɖ͡ʐer]'chain'-
PolishStandard[2][3]em'jam'Laminal; it's transcribed /d͡ʒ/ by most Polish scholars. See Polish phonology
Southeastern Cuyavian dialects[4]dzwon[ɖ͡ʐvɔn̪]'bell'Some speakers. It's a result of hypercorrecting the more popular merger of /ɖ͡ʐ/ and /d͡z/ into [d͡z].
Suwałki dialect[5]
Northern Qiangvvdhe[ʁɖ͡ʐə]'star'
Serbo-Croatian[6][7]џеп/ep[ɖ͡ʐê̞p]'pocket'Apical. It may be palato-alveolar instead, depending on the dialect. See Serbo-Croatian phonology
Slovak[8]ús[ɖ͡ʐu̞ːs]'juice'Laminal.
Torwali[9]حؕـىگ[ɖ͡ʐiɡ̥]'long'Contrasts with a palatal affricate.
Yi / rry[ɖ͡ʐɪ˧]'tooth'

Voiced retroflex non-sibilant affricate

Voiced retroflex non-sibilant affricate
͡ɻ̝

Features

Occurrence

LanguageWordIPAMeaningNotes
Malagasy[10] Also described as regular plosives, trilled affricates and sibilant affricates.

See also

Notes

  1. Farid Ahmad Raza Booni Chitral. "Preliminary Grapheme to Phoneme Khowar Alphabet Chart" (PDF).
  2. Jassem (2003:103)
  3. Hamann (2004:65)
  4. "Gwary polskie - Gwara regionu". Archived from the original on 2013-11-13. Retrieved 2013-11-06.
  5. "Gwary polskie - Szadzenie". Archived from the original on 2013-11-13. Retrieved 2013-11-06.
  6. Kordić (2006), p. 5.
  7. Landau et al. (1999), p. 67.
  8. Hanulíková & Hamann (2010:374)
  9. Lunsford (2001:16–20)
  10. Ladefoged, Peter; Maddieson, Ian (1996). The Sounds of the World's Languages. Oxford: Blackwell. p. 131. ISBN 0-631-19815-6.

References

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