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Voiceless palatal plosive: Difference between revisions

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|align="center"| [[Auvergnat language|Auvergnat]]||align="center"| [[Latin alphabet|'''''t'''irador'']] ||align="center"| {{IPA|[ciʀaˈdu]}}||align="center"| 'drawer'||
|align="center"| [[Auvergnat language|Auvergnat]]||align="center"| [[Latin alphabet|'''''t'''irador'']] ||align="center"| {{IPA|[ciʀaˈdu]}}||align="center"| 'drawer'||
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| colspan="2" align="center"| [[Polish language|Polish]] ||align="center"| [[Polish orthography|'''''ki'''e'''dy''''']] ||align="center"| {{IPA|[ˈcɛdɨ] }}||align="center"| 'and'|| See [[Polish phonology]]
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| colspan="2" align="center"| [[Plautdietsch]] ||align="center"| [[Latin alphabet|'''''Kj'''oa'''kj''''']] ||align="center"| {{IPA|[coac] }}||align="center"| 'church'||
| colspan="2" align="center"| [[Plautdietsch]] ||align="center"| [[Latin alphabet|'''''Kj'''oa'''kj''''']] ||align="center"| {{IPA|[coac] }}||align="center"| 'church'||

Revision as of 11:21, 3 October 2007

IPA number107
Audio sample
Encoding
X-SAMPAc
Image

The voiceless palatal plosive is a type of consonantal sound used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is c, and the equivalent X-SAMPA symbol is c.

Hungarian is one of the few languages with true palatal plosives. More commonly, the symbol /c/ is used to represent a voiceless postalveolar affricate, for example in the Indic languages. This may be considered appropriate when the place of articulation needs to be specified, but the distinction between stop and affricate is not contrastive, and therefore of secondary importance.

Features

Features of the voiceless palatal plosive:

Occurrence

Language Word IPA Meaning Notes
Albanian kuq [kuc] 'red'
Asu [cúma] 'to sew'
Basque ttantta [canca] 'droplet'
Czech čeština [ˈʧɛʃ.cɪ.na] 'Czech languge' See Czech phonology
Dinka car [car] 'black'
Greek κέδρος [ˈce̞ðro̞s̠] 'cedar' See Modern Greek phonology
Gweno [ca] 'to come'
Hungarian tyúk [cuːk] 'hen' See Hungarian phonology
Icelandic gjóla [couːla] 'light wind'
Latvian ķirbis [ˈcirbis] 'pumpkin'
Macedonian вреќа [vrɛca] 'large bag'
Norwegian northern dialects fett [fɛcː] 'fat' See Norwegian phonology
Occitan Limousin tireta [ciˈʀetɒ] 'drawer'
Auvergnat tirador [ciʀaˈdu] 'drawer'
Plautdietsch Kjoakj [coac] 'church'
Scottish Gaelic ceann [cʰɛunˠ] 'head'
Slovak deväť [ˈɟɛvæc] 'nine'
Tadaksahak [cɛːˈnɐ] 'small'
Turkish köyün [cœˈjyn] 'village' (gen.) See Turkish phonology
Vietnamese ch [cɤ ˧˩] 'wait' See Vietnamese phonology
Western Desert Language kutju [kucu] 'one' See Vietnamese phonology

See also