Voiced retroflex lateral approximant

The voiced retroflex lateral approximant is a type of consonantal sound used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is ⟨ɭ ⟩, and the equivalent X-SAMPA symbol is l`.

Voiced retroflex lateral approximant
ɭ
IPA Number156
Audio sample
Encoding
Entity (decimal)ɭ
Unicode (hex)U+026D
X-SAMPAl`
Braille⠲ (braille pattern dots-256)⠇ (braille pattern dots-123)

The retroflex lateral approximant contrasts phonemically with its voiceless counterpart /ɭ̊ / in Iaai and Toda.[1] In both of these languages it also contrasts with more anterior /, l/, which are dental in Iaai and alveolar in Toda.[1] Goinoitan Latin Alphabet.

Features

Features of the voiced retroflex lateral approximant:

Occurrence

In the following transcriptions, diacritics may be used to distinguish between apical [ɭ̺] and laminal [ɭ̻].

LanguageWordIPAMeaningNotes
Bashkirел'wind'Apical retroflex lateral; occurs in front vowel contexts.
Dhivehiފަޅޯ / falhoa[faɭoː]'papaya'
Enindhilyagwamarluwiya[maɭuwija]'emu'
Faroeseárla[ɔɻɭa]'early'Allophone of /l/ after /ɹ/. See Faroese phonology
FrenchStandard[2]belle jambe[bɛɭ ʒɑ̃b]'beautiful leg'Allophone of /l/ before /f/ and /ʒ/ for some speakers.[2] See French phonology
Gujarati[nəɭə]'tap'Represented by a . Pronounced as /ɭə/.[3]
Kannadaಎಳ್ಳು[ˈeɭːu]'sesame'Represented by a
Katukina-Kanamari[4][ɭuːˈbɯ]'to go'
KhantyEastern dialectsпуӆ[puɭ]'bit'
Some northern dialects
Korean / sol[soɭ]'pine'Represented by a . May also be pronounced as /l/.
Malayalamമലയാളം'Malayalam'Represented by the letter . Sub apical retroflex. Long and short forms are contrastive word-medially[5][6]
Mapudungun[7]mara[ˈmɜɭɜ]'hare'Possible realization of /ʐ/; may be [ʐ] or [ɻ] instead.[7]
Marathiबा[baːɭ]'baby/child'Represented by a . Pronounced as /ɭə/. See Marathi phonology.
MiyakoIrabu dialect昼間
ピィルマ
[pɭːma]'daytime'Allophone of /ɾ/ used everywhere except syllable-initially.
NorwegianEastern and central dialectsfarlig[ˈfɑːɭi]'dangerous'See Norwegian phonology
Odia[pʰɔɭɔ]'fruit'Represented by a . Pronounced as /ɭɔ/.[3]
Rajasthani[pʰəɭ]'fruit'Represented by a ⟨ळ⟩.
Paiwan[8]ladjap[ˈɭaɖap]'lightning' or 'flash'See Paiwan phonology
PunjabiGurmukhiਤ੍ਰੇਲ਼[t̪ɾeɭ]'dew'Represented by a ਲ਼ and لؕ. Font support may be required to see the letter in Shahmukhi.
Shahmukhiتریࣇ
SanskritVedicगरु[gɐruɭɐ]'the mythological bird who Is the vahana of Lord Vishnu'Represented by a . Pronounced as /ɭɐ/.This consonant was present in Vedic Sanskrit but had become /ɖ/ ⟨ड⟩ in classical Sanskrit. See Vedic Sanskrit and Sanskrit phonology.
Swedishsorl'murmur' (noun)See Swedish phonology
Tamil[9]ஆள்[äːɭ]'person'Represented by a ள். See Tamil phonology
Teluguనీళ్ళు'water'Represented by a

See also

Notes

References

External links