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The voiceless bilabial fricative 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 p\.

Features


Features of the voiceless bilabial fricative:

In English


This consonant is lacking in English, and English speakers will often pronounce voiceless labiodental fricative when speaking a language that has it, while speakers of a language that has it may use it in place of English 'f'. English speakers, however, may consider this consonant similar to a simple blow, but with a much narrower opening between the lips.

In other languages


Ewe

Ewe contrasts bilabial , written ƒ, with labiodental /f/, written f, as in é ƒá "he polished" vs. é fá "he is cold".

Japanese

Japanese has an allophone of before , which is compressed rather than rounded . It is most commonly romanized as fu (as in Fuji), but hu is often used when the underlying morphology is more important than pronunciation (see kunrei-shiki).

Vedic Sanskrit

Vedic Sanskrit once had this phoneme, as a conditioned allophone of visarga, but it was lost in Classical Sanskrit. It was called upamādhmīya.

See also


Fricative consonants | Bilabial consonants

Stimmloser bilabialer Frikativ | Consonne fricative bilabiale sourde | Spółgłoska szczelinowa dwuwargowa bezdźwięczna | Tonlös bilabial frikativa

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Voiceless bilabial fricative".

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