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

Of the six plosives that would be expected from the most common pattern world-wide, that is, three places of articulation plus voicing and are the most frequently missing, being absent in about 10% of languages that otherwise have this pattern. The former is an areal feature (see ). Missing , on the other hand, is widely scattered around the world. (A few languages, such as Modern Standard Arabic and Ket, are missing both.) It seems that is somewhat more difficult to articulate than the other basic plosives. Ian Maddieson speculates that this may be due to a physical difficulty in voicing velars: Voicing requires that air flow into the mouth cavity, and the relatively small space allowed by the position of velar consonants means that it will fill up with air quickly, making voicing difficult to maintain in for as long as it is in or . This could have two effects: and might become confused, and the distinction is lost, or perhaps a never develops when a language first starts making voicing distinctions. (Note that with uvulars, where there is even less space between the glottis and tongue for airflow, the imbalance is more extreme: Voiced is much rarer than voiceless .)

Features


Features of the voiced velar plosive:

Varieties of


IPA Description
plain g
or breathy voiced or murmured g
palatalized g
labialized g
unreleased g
voiceless or slack voice g

In English


In English, the sound is denoted by the letter 'g' as in gum or bag. However, the letter 'g' does not always denote the sound When followed by 'i' or 'e' or preceded by 'd' it sometimes denotes the affricate as in gin and judgement. When preceded by 'n' and occurring at the end of a morpheme, it often becomes the digraph 'ng', which denotes the velar nasal , as in singer and rung, but not finger.

In other languages


The sound is a common sound cross-linguistically. Many languages have at least a plain , and some distinguish more than one variety. Many Indian languages, such as Hindi, have a contrast between breathy voice and modal voice .

The symbol


, though the "looptail G" Looptail g.PNG is considered an acceptable alternative. The Unicode character "Latin small letter G" (U+0067) renders as either an opentail G or a looptail G depending on font, while the character "Latin small letter script G" (U+0261) is always an opentail G, but is generally available only in fonts with the IPA Extensions character block.

See also


Consonants

Znělá velární ploziva | Stimmhafter velarer Plosiv | Consonne occlusive vélaire voisée | 有声軟口蓋破裂音 | Oclusiva velar sonora

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Voiced velar plosive".

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