Voiceless alveolar sibilant: Difference between revisions

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| Plain || さ, す, せ, そ (sa,su,se,so) || 桜 (sakura) /sakura/
| Plain || さ, す, せ, そ (sa,su,se,so) || 桜 (sakura) /sakura/
|-
|-
| Retracted || || 手裏剣 (shuriken) /sjuriken/ [ʃɯɽikeɴ] <!-- is this accurate? -->
| Retracted || し (shi) || 手裏剣 (shuriken) /sjuriken/ [ʃɯɽikeɴ] <!-- is this accurate? -->
|}
|}



Revision as of 21:54, 17 October 2004

s
Pulmonic Consonant
IPA: s
X-SAMPA: s
Kirshenbaum: s
Place of Articulation: Alveolar
Manner of Articulation: Fricative (Sibilant)
Phonological features:

The voiceless alveolar sibilant is a very common sound, occuring in many languages. Its voiced equivalent is z, and it is part of the affricate ts.

Labial-velar approximants in natlangs

English

Plain s sit /sɪt/
Voiced s dogs /dɒgs/ [dɒgz]

Japanese

Plain さ, す, せ, そ (sa,su,se,so) 桜 (sakura) /sakura/
Retracted し (shi) 手裏剣 (shuriken) /sjuriken/ [ʃɯɽikeɴ]

Latin

Plain s sol /sol/

Nahuatl

Voiced z, c(i, e) cihuātl /siwaːtɬ/