Phoneme hole

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A phoneme hole is a feature of a language's phonology, where an 'expected' phoneme does not occur. What counts as 'expected' is debatable, but at a pinch, a language would be expected to cover as many combinations of place of articulation and manner of articulation as possible.

An example of a consonant inventory without holes might be:

p t k
b d g
f s x
v z ɣ
m n ŋ

while one with several holes might be:

t ʈ k
b ɖ
f s ʂ
m n ɳ
ʋ ɭ ɣ


Common one-phoneme holes

Impossible phonemes

Certain POA/MOA combinations are necessarily lacking from human languages due to articulatory constraints. These include, among others:

  • Labial laterals
  • Glottal nasals
  • Voiced glottal stop