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Voiced dental and alveolar taps and flaps information


The voiced alveolar tap or flap is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents a dental, alveolar, or postalveolar tap or flap is ɾ.

The terms tap and flap are often used interchangeably. Peter Ladefoged proposed the distinction that a tap strikes its point of contact directly, as a very brief stop, and a flap strikes the point of contact tangentially: "Flaps are most typically made by retracting the tongue tip behind the alveolar ridge and moving it forward so that it strikes the ridge in passing."[1] That distinction between the alveolar tap and flap can be written in the IPA with tap ɾ and flap ɽ, the 'retroflex' symbol being used for the one that starts with the tongue tip curled back behind the alveolar ridge. The distinction is noticeable in the speech of some American English speakers in distinguishing the words "potty" (tap [ɾ]) and "party" (retroflex [ɽ]).

For linguists who do not make the distinction, alveolars and dentals are typically called taps and other articulations flaps. No language contrasts a tap and a flap at the same place of articulation.

The sound is often analyzed and thus interpreted by non-native English-speakers as an 'R-sound' in many foreign languages. In languages for which the segment is present but not phonemic, it is often an allophone of either an alveolar stop ([t], [d], or both) or a rhotic consonant (like the alveolar trill or the alveolar approximant).

If the alveolar flap is the only rhotic consonant in the language, it may be transcribed with r although that symbol technically represents the trill.

The voiced alveolar tapped fricative reported from some languages is actually a very brief voiced alveolar non-sibilant fricative.

  1. ^ Valentin-Marquez (2015)

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Voiced dental and alveolar taps and flaps

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Tap and flap consonants

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for some speakers, and Kamviri, which also has apical alveolar taps and flaps. The tap and flap consonants identified by the International Phonetic Alphabet...

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Trill consonant

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Alphabet: [r] – Voiced alveolar trill [r̥] – Voiceless alveolar trill [ʙ] – Voiced bilabial trill [ʙ̥] – Voiceless bilabial trill [ɽ͡r] – Voiced retroflex trill...

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International Phonetic Alphabet

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l⟩ and laminal ⟨τ δ ς ζ ν λ⟩, which is easily applicable to alveolar vs dental (when a language distinguishes apical alveolar from laminal dental, as...

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Velar consonant

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for the voiced alveolar lateral fricative, ⟨ɮ⟩, but also notes that the sound to be prevelar.) Donald J. Phillips (1976). Wahgi Phonology and Morphology...

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Rhotic consonant

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fricatives (and most often is so), unless it occurs single between vowels, being so realized as a dental, alveolar, postalveolar or retroflex flap. In the...

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Allophone

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just like "panning". In this case, both alveolar stops and alveolar nasal plus stop sequences become voiced taps after two vowels when the second vowel...

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Phonetics

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of a dental stop or an alveolar stop, it will usually be laminal if it is a dental stop, and the stop will usually be apical if it is an alveolar stop...

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Approximant

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approximant [ð̼˕] (usually transcribed ⟨ð̼⟩) dental approximant [ð̞] (usually transcribed ⟨ð⟩) alveolar & post-alveolar approximant [ɹ] retroflex approximant...

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Manner of articulation

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"utter" and the "dd" of "udder" are pronounced as a flap [ɾ] in North American and Australian English. Many linguists distinguish taps from flaps, but there...

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Lenition

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stops into fricatives but also laterals and trills into weaker laterals and taps), and voiceless stops became voiced. For example, Indo-European intervocalic...

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Bengali phonology

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as a voiced alveolar flap [ɾ], voiced alveolar approximant [ɹ] or voiced alveolar trill [r]. Most speakers colloquially pronounce /r/ as a flap [ɾ], although...

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Spanish dialects and varieties

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realized as an alveolar approximant [ɹ] or even as a voiced apico-alveolar [ɹ̝], and it is quite common in inland Ecuador, Peru, most of Bolivia and in parts...

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Australian Aboriginal languages

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full voice contrasts: /p b/, dental /t̪ d̪/, alveolar /t d/, the sibilants /s z/ (which have allophonic variation with [tʃ] and [dʒ] respectively) and velar...

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Faifi language

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Alfaifi & Behnstedt (2010) describes the phoneme /ʃ/ as apical-alveolar in the Lower dialect and apical-palatal in the Upper dialect, while in Minabbih it...

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