Voiced alveolo-palatal affricate

The voiced alveolo-palatal sibilant affricate is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages. The symbols in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represent this sound are d͡ʑ, d͜ʑ, ɟ͡ʑ and ɟ͜ʑ, and the equivalent X-SAMPA symbols are d_z\ and J\_z\, though transcribing the stop component with ɟ (J\ in X-SAMPA) is rare. The tie bar may be omitted, yielding or ɟʑ in the IPA and dz\ or J\z\ in X-SAMPA.

Voiced alveolo-palatal affricate
ɟʑ
IPA Number216
Audio sample
Encoding
Entity (decimal)ʥ
Unicode (hex)U+02A5
X-SAMPAd_z\

Neither [d] nor [ɟ] is a completely narrow transcription of the stop component, which can be narrowly transcribed as [d̠ʲ] (retracted and palatalized [d]), [ɟ̟] or [ɟ˖] (both symbols denote an advanced [ɟ]). The equivalent X-SAMPA symbols are d_-' or d_-_j and J\_+, respectively. There is also a dedicated symbol ȡ, which is not a part of the IPA. Therefore, narrow transcriptions of the voiced alveolo-palatal sibilant affricate include [d̠ʲʑ], [ɟ̟ʑ], [ɟ˖ʑ] and [ȡʑ].

This affricate used to have a dedicated symbol U+02A5 ʥ LATIN SMALL LETTER DZ DIGRAPH WITH CURL; ʥ was one of the six dedicated symbols for affricates in the International Phonetic Alphabet. It is the sibilant equivalent of voiced palatal affricate.

Features

Features of the voiced alveolo-palatal affricate:

Occurrence

LanguageWordIPAMeaningNotes
Bengaliখন[d͡ʑɔkʰon]'when'See Bengali phonology
Catalan[1]All dialectsmitjà[mɪ(d)ˈd͡ʑa]'medium'See Catalan phonology
Valencianjoc[ˈd͡ʑɔk]'game'
ChineseSouthern Min / ji̍t[d͡ʑit̚˧ʔ]'sun'
Wu[d͡ʑy]'he/she/it'
IrishSome dialects[2][3][4]dearg[d͡ʑaɾˠəɡ]'red'Realization of the palatalized alveolar stop /dʲ/ in dialects such as Erris, Teelin and Tourmakeady.[2][3][4] See Irish phonology
Japanese知人 / chijin[t͡ɕid͡ʑĩɴ]'acquaintance'See Japanese phonology
Korean편지 / pyeonji[pʰjɘːnd͡ʑi]'letter'See Korean phonology
MalayJambiتوجوه / tujuh[tud͡ʑʊh]'seven'See Jambi Malay
Okinawanfijeetiinagaa[ɸid͡ʑeːtiːnagaː]'thief'
Polish[5]więk'sound'See Polish phonology
RomanianBanat dialect[6]des[d͡ʑes]'frequent'Allophone of /d/ before front vowels. Corresponds to [d] in standard Romanian. See Romanian phonology
Russianдочь бы[ˈd̪o̞d͡ʑ bɨ]'daughter would'Allophone of /t͡ɕ/ before voiced consonants. See Russian phonology
Sema[7]aji[à̠d͡ʑì]'blood'Possible allophone of /ʒ/ before /i, e/; can be realized as [ʑ ~ ʒ ~ d͡ʒ] instead.[7]
Serbo-Croatian[8][9]ђаво / đavo[d͡ʑâ̠ʋo̞ː]'devil'Merges with /d͡ʒ/ in Kajkavian and Chakavian dialects. See Serbo-Croatian phonology
Uzbek[10][example needed]
XumiLower[11][d͡ʑɐʔ˦]'water'
Upper[12][d͡ʑɐ̝˦]
Yi / jji[d͡ʑi˧]'bee'

See also

Notes

References

External links