Dental consonant: Difference between revisions

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A '''dental consonant''' is a consonant articulated with the front of the tongue against the upper teeth. They are a subtype of [[coronal consonant]]s, and are typically [[laminal]], especially is contrasting with another type of coronal consonant.
A '''dental consonant''' is a consonant articulated with the front of the tongue against the upper teeth. They are a subtype of [[coronal consonant]]s, and are typically [[laminal]], especially is contrasting with another type of coronal consonant.


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* [[Alveolar consonant]]
* [[Alveolar consonant]]


[[Category:Phonology]]
{{Phonetics and Phonology}}

Latest revision as of 11:21, 3 November 2012

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A dental consonant is a consonant articulated with the front of the tongue against the upper teeth. They are a subtype of coronal consonants, and are typically laminal, especially is contrasting with another type of coronal consonant.

In IPA dentals are denoted, if necessary, by appending the diacritic ◌̪ (U+032A COMBINING BRIDGE BELOW) to the coronal basic symbols, but this is frequently omitted if dentality isn't contrastive. Also, the non-sibilant fricatives have separate signs: [θ], [ð].

Some basic dental consonants:

See also