- Uvular consonant
Uvulars are
consonant s articulated with the back of thetongue against or near the uvula, that is, further back in the mouth thanvelar consonant s. Uvulars may be plosives, fricatives, nasal stops, trills, or approximants, though the IPA does not provide a separate symbol for the approximant, and the symbol for the voiced fricative is used instead. Uvular affricates can certainly be made but are rare: they occur in some southern High-German dialects, as well as in a few African and Native American languages. (Ejective uvular affricates occur in as realizations of uvular stops in Lillooet and Georgian.)The uvular consonants identified by the
International Phonetic Alphabet are:English has no uvular consonants, and they are unknown in the indigenous languages of Australia and the Pacific. Uvular consonants are however found in many African and Middle-Eastern languages, most notably Arabic, and in Native American languages. In parts of the Caucasus mountains and northwestern North America, nearly every language has uvular stops and fricatives. Two
uvular R s are found in north-western Europe, where they spread from northern French.The voiceless uvular
plosive is transcribed as IPA| [q] in both the IPA andSAMPA . It is pronounced somewhat like thevoiceless velar plosive IPA| [k] , but with the middle of the tongue further back, against the uvula rather than the velum. The most familiar use will doubtless be in the transliteration of Arabic place names such as "Qatar" and "Iraq" into English, though, since English lacks this sound, this is generally pronounced as the most similar sound that occurs in English, IPA| [k] .IPA| [ɢ] , the voiced equivalent of IPA| [q] , is much rarer. It is like the
voiced velar plosive IPA| [g] , but articulated in the same uvular position as IPA| [q] . Few languages use this sound, but it is found in some varieties of Persian and in severalNortheast Caucasian languages , notably Tabasaran.The voiceless uvular fricative IPA| [χ] is similar to the
voiceless velar fricative IPA| [x] , except that it is articulated on the uvula. It is found instead of IPA| [x] in some dialects of German and Arabic.Uvular flaps have been reported for Kube (Trans-New Guinea) and for the variety of Khmer spoken in
Battambang .The
Tlingit language of the Alaskan Panhandle has ten uvular consonants:and the
Ubykh language of Turkey has 20.Uvular Rhotics
The uvular trill IPA| [ʀ] is used in certain
dialect s (especially those associated with European capitals) of French, German, Dutch, Portuguese, Swedish and Norwegian, as well as Hebrew, for the rhotic phoneme. In many of these it has a uvular fricative (either voiced IPA| [ʁ] or voiceless IPA| [χ] ) as anallophone when it follows one of thevoiceless stops IPA|/p/, IPA|/t/, or IPA|/k/ at the end of a word, as in "maître" IPA| [mɛtχ] , or even a uvular approximant.As with most trills, uvular trills are often reduced to a single contact, especially between vowels.
Unlike other uvular consonants, the uvular trill is articulated without a retraction of the tongue, and therefore doesn't lower neighboring high vowels the way uvular stops commonly do.
Several other languages, including
Inuktitut , Abkhaz and some varieties of Arabic, have a voiced uvular fricative but do not treat it as arhotic consonant .In Lakhota the uvular trill is an allophone of the voiced uvular fricative before IPA|/i/.
ee also
*
Place of articulation
*List of phonetics topics
*Guttural R References
*SOWL
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.