- Liquid consonant
Liquid consonants, or liquids, are
approximant consonants that are not classified assemivowel s (glides) because they do not correspond phonetically to specificvowel s (in the way that, for example, the initial IPA| [j] in English "yes" corresponds to IPA| [i] ).The class of liquids can be divided into lateral liquids and rhotics. "
Obstruent laterals", which are mainly found in indigenous languages ofNorth America and include such sounds as thevoiceless alveolar lateral fricative (IPA| [ɬ] ), thevoiced alveolar lateral fricative IPA| [ɮ] , and theaffricate s IPA| [tɬ] , IPA| [tɬʼ] , and IPA| [dɮ] , are sometimes thought of as liquids but do not have their high sonority. Nor canobstruent laterals be used in the same way assonorant laterals in the languages where they occur.Typical liquids in English are the sounds IPA|/l/ and IPA|/ɹ/. In most other European languages the letter r represents an alveolar trill, which is its value in the IPA. In French, German and Danish, the letter r represents a
uvular trill pronounced far back in the throat (IPA| [ʁ] )—this may also be a uvular fricative or approximant.Some European languages, such as Italian and Serbo-Croatian, have more than two liquid phonemes. These languages typically have the set IPA|/l/ /ʎ/ /r/, though some (like Russian) have IPA|/lʲ/, /ɫ/, /r/ (Russian also has IPA|/rʲ/).
Elsewhere in the world, two liquids of the types mentioned above remains the most common attribute of a language's consonant inventory, except in North America and Australia. In North America, a majority of languages do not have rhotics at all and there is a wide variety of lateral sounds - though most are
obstruent laterals rather than liquids. Most indigenous Australian languages are very rich in liquids, with some having as many as seven distinct liquids. These typically include dental, alveolar, retroflex and palatal laterals, and as many as three rhotics. This richness in liquid consonants in a sense compensates for the small vowel inventories and lack of fricatives of Aboriginal languages.Some African languages also contrast two rhotics, usually a trill and a flap.
On the other side, there are many indigenous languages with no liquids in the
Amazon Basin and eastern North America, and also a few in Asia and Africa. Polynesian languages typically have only one liquid, which may be either a lateral or a rhotic.ee also
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List of phonetics topics References
*SOWL
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