Voiceless labiodental fricative: Difference between revisions

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{| border="1"; style="float:right;" valign="top"
!style="background:#CCCCFF;" colspan=2 align="center"| <big>f</big>
|-
|colspan=2 align="center"| Pulmonic Consonant
|-
| [[IPA]] || f
|-
| [[X-SAMPA]] || <tt>f</tt>
|-
| [[Kirshenbaum]] || f
|-
| Place of Articulation: || [[Labiodental]]
|-
| Manner of Articulation: || [[Fricative]]
|-
| [[Phonological feature]]s:
| [+[[consonant]]al] <br> '''[+<small>LABIAL</small>]''' <br> [+[[continuant]]] <br> [+[[strident]]</small>] <br> [-voice]
|}
The '''voiceless labiodental fricative''' is a sound that occurs in some languages, represented as {{IPA|/f/}} in the IPA.
The '''voiceless labiodental fricative''' is a sound that occurs in some languages, represented as {{IPA|/f/}} in the IPA.


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* xʷ → f (Oscan, Latin)
* xʷ → f (Oscan, Latin)
* ʍ → f (some English dialects)
* ʍ → f (some English dialects)
* Devoicing: v → f. In many West Germanic varieties including Standard German, the change of *w → ʋ ~ v has pushed older †/v/ to /f/. This can be part of a more general devoicing process; see eg. [[wikipedia:final devoicing|final devoicing]].
* Devoicing: v → f. In many [[West Germanic]] varieties including Standard [[German]], the change of *w → ʋ ~ v has pushed older †/v/ to /f/. This can also be part of a more general devoicing process; see eg. [[wikipedia:final devoicing|final devoicing]].


Other:
Other:
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<references/>
<references/>
[[Category:Phonetic segments]]

Revision as of 06:50, 23 January 2011

f
Pulmonic Consonant
IPA f
X-SAMPA f
Kirshenbaum f
Place of Articulation: Labiodental
Manner of Articulation: Fricative
Phonological features: [+consonantal]
[+LABIAL]
[+continuant]
[+strident]
[-voice]

The voiceless labiodental fricative is a sound that occurs in some languages, represented as /f/ in the IPA.

Sound Changes

See also: Fricatives

To

A common origin of /f/ is the lenition of a voiceless bilabial stop such as *p or *pʰ. This can be part of a common stop lenition process, but may be independant, as in Arabic and Hungarian. The change commonly proceeds thru a bilabial intermediate [ɸ], so other outcomes are possible, eg. Celtic, where *sɸ → f, but *ɸ → h → ∅ otherwise. (See more at /p/, fricative.)

Many other fricatives can also change to /f/:

  • θ → f (Oscan, Latin and most other Italic languages[1]; some English dialects; some Oceanic branches)
  • x → f (Oscan — but not Latin, where *x → h)
  • xʷ → f (Oscan, Latin)
  • ʍ → f (some English dialects)
  • Devoicing: v → f. In many West Germanic varieties including Standard German, the change of *w → ʋ ~ v has pushed older †/v/ to /f/. This can also be part of a more general devoicing process; see eg. final devoicing.

Other:

  • w → f is found in Irish (when not intervocalic). Many different phonetic paths of development are possible here.
  • sp → f in Albanian
  1. Note on Italic: in Latin, the word-internal voicing of fricatives bleeds the change to /f/, leading to different reflexes, so /f/ only results initially.