Voiced uvular fricative

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The voiced uvular fricative is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is ʁ, an inverted small uppercase letter ʀ, or in broad transcription r if rhotic. This consonant is one of the several collectively called guttural R when found in European languages.

Voiced uvular fricative
ʁ
IPA Number143
Audio sample
Encoding
Entity (decimal)ʁ
Unicode (hex)U+0281
X-SAMPAR
Braille⠔ (braille pattern dots-35)⠼ (braille pattern dots-3456)
Voiced uvular approximant
ʁ̞
IPA Number144
Audio sample
Encoding
X-SAMPAR_o

The voiced uvular approximant is also found interchangeably with the fricative, and may also be transcribed as ʁ. Because the IPA symbol stands for the uvular fricative, the approximant may be specified by adding the downtack: ʁ̞, though some writings[1] use a superscript ʶ, which is not an official IPA practice.

For a voiced pre-uvular fricative (also called post-velar), see voiced velar fricative.

Features

Features of the voiced uvular fricative:

Occurrence

In Western Europe, a uvular trill pronunciation of rhotic consonants spread from northern French to several dialects and registers of Basque,[2] Catalan, Danish, Dutch, German, Judaeo-Spanish, Norwegian, Occitan, Portuguese, Swedish, some variants of Low Saxon,[3] and Yiddish.[citation needed] However, not all of them remain a uvular trill today.In Brazilian Portuguese, it is usually a velar fricative ([x], [ɣ]), voiceless uvular fricative [χ], or glottal transition ([h], [ɦ]), except in southern Brazil, where alveolar, velar and uvular trills as well as the voiced uvular fricative predominate. Because such uvular rhotics often do not contrast with alveolar ones, IPA transcriptions may often use ⟨r⟩ to represent them for ease of typesetting. For more information, see guttural R.

Ladefoged & Maddieson (1996) note, "There is... a complication in the case of uvular fricatives in that the shape of the vocal tract may be such that the uvula vibrates."[4]

It is also present in most Turkic languages, except for Turkish, and in Caucasian languages. It could also come in ɣ.

LanguageWordIPAMeaningNotes
Abkhazцыҕ cëğ[tsəʁ]'marten'See Abkhaz phonology
Adygheтыгъэ / ğa / تہغە'sun'
AfrikaansParts of the former Cape Province[5]rooi[ʁoːi̯]'red'May be a trill [ʀ] instead.[5] See Afrikaans phonology
AlbanianArbëresh

Some Moresian accents

vëlla[vʁa]'brother'May be pronounced as a normal double l. Sometimes, the guttural r is present in words starting with g in some dialects.
AleutAtkan dialectchamĝul[tʃɑmʁul]'to wash'
ArabicModern Standard[6]غرفة ġurfa[ˈʁʊrfɐ]'room'Mostly transcribed as /ɣ/, may be velar, post-velar or uvular, depending on dialect.[7] See Arabic phonology
Archi[8]гъӀабос ġabos[ʁˤabos][9]'croak'
Armenianղեկ łek'rudder'
Asturian languageMost common allophone of /g/. May be an approximant.[10][11]
AvarтIагъур / thaġur / طاغۇر[tʼaˈʁur]'cap'
Bashkirтуғыҙ / tuğïð / توعئذ'nine'
BasqueNorthern dialectsurre[uʁe]'gold'
Chilcotinrelkɨsh[ʁəlkɪʃ]'he walks'
DanishStandard[12]rød[ʁ̞œ̠ð̠]'red'Most often an approximant when initial.[13] In other positions, it can be either a fricative (also described as voiceless [χ]) or an approximant.[12] Also described as pharyngeal [ʕ̞].[14] It can be a fricative trill in word-initial positions when emphasizing a word.[15] See Danish phonology
Dutch[16][17][18][19]Belgian Limburg[20][21]rad[ʁɑt]'wheel'Either a fricative or an approximant.[18][20][19][17][22] Realization of /r/ varies considerably among dialects. See Dutch phonology
Central Netherlands[23]
East Flanders[21]
Northern Netherlands[23]
Randstad[23]
Southern Netherlands[23]
EnglishDyfed[24]red[ʁɛd]'red'Not all speakers.[24] Alveolar in other Welsh accents.
Gwynedd[24]
North-east Leinster[25]Corresponds to [ɹ ~ ɾ ~ ɻ] in other dialects of English in Ireland.
Northumbrian[26][27]Described both as a fricative[26] and an approximant.[27] More rarely it is a trill [ʀ].[26] Mostly found in rural areas of Northumberland and northern County Durham, declining. See English phonology and Northumbrian Burr.
Sierra Leonean[26]More rarely a trill [ʀ].[26]
Frenchrester'to stay'See French phonology
paris'Paris'Allophone of /r/ before /a/ and after /i/.
GermanStandard[28]Rost[ʁɔstʰ]'rust'Either a fricative or, more often, an approximant. In free variation with a uvular trill. See Standard German phonology
Lower Rhine[28]
Swabian[29][ʁ̞oʃt]An approximant.[29] It is the realization of /ʁ/ in onsets,[29] otherwise it is an epiglottal approximant.[29]
GondiHill-Maṛiapār̥-[paːʁ-]'to sing'Corresponds to /r/ or /ɾ/ in other Gondi dialects.
HebrewModernעוֹרֵב[ʔoˈʁ̞ev]See Modern Hebrew phonology.[30]
InuktitutEast Inuktitut dialectmarruuk[mɑʁːuːk]'two'
ItalianSome speakers[31]raro[ˈʁäːʁo]'rare'Rendition alternative to the standard Italian alveolar trill [r], due to individual orthoepic defects and/or regional variations that make the alternative sound more prevalent, notably in Alto Adige (bordering with German-speaking Austria), Val d'Aosta (bordering with France) and in parts of the Parma province, more markedly around Fidenza. Other alternative sounds may be a uvular trill [ʀ] or a labiodental approximant [ʋ].[31] See Italian phonology.
Kabardianбгъэ / bğa / بغە'eagle'
Kabyleⴱⴻ
bbeɣ
بغ
[bːəʁ]'to dive'
Kazakhсаған / sağan / ساعان[sɑˈʁɑn]'to you'
Kyrgyzжамгыр / camğır' / جامعىر[dʒɑmˈʁɯr]'rain'
Lakotaaǧúyapi[aʁʊjapɪ]'bread'
LimburgishMaastrichtian[32]drei[dʀ̝ɛi̯]'three'Fricative trill; the fricative component varies between uvular and post-velar.[32][33] See Maastrichtian dialect phonology and Weert dialect phonology
Weert dialect[33]drej[dʀ̝æj]
Luxembourgish[34]Parmesan[ˈpʰɑʁməzaːn]'Parmesan'Appears as an allophone of /ʀ/ between a vowel and a voiced consonant and as an allophone of /ʁ/ between a back vowel and another vowel (back or otherwise). A minority of speakers use it as the only consonantal variety of /ʀ/ (in a complementary distribution with [χ]), also where it is trilled in the standard language.[34] See Luxembourgish phonology
MalayPerak dialectPerak[peʁɑk̚]'Perak'See Malay phonology
Malto[35]पोग़े[poʁe]'smoke'
NorwegianSouthern dialectsrar[ʁ̞ɑːʁ̞]'strange'Either an approximant or a fricative. See Norwegian phonology
Southwestern dialects
Toba qomTakshek dialectAwogoyk[awoʁojk]'moon'
Tundra NenetsSome speakersвара[waʁa]'goose'
OsseticIronæгъгъæд æğğæd[ˈəʁːəd]'enough'
PortugueseEuropean[36]carro[ˈkaʁu]'car'Word-initial /ʁ/ is commonly realized as a uvular trill [ʀ] in Lisbon.[15] See Portuguese phonology
Setubalense[37]ruralizar[ʁuʁɐɫiˈzaʁ]'to ruralize'Outcome of a merger of /ɾ/ with /ʁ/, which is unique in the Lusophone world. Often trilled instead.
Fluminense[37][38]ardência[ɐʁˈdẽsjə]'burning feeling'Due to 19th century Portuguese influence, Rio de Janeiro's dialect merged coda /ɾ/ into /ʁ/.[39] Often trilled. In free variation with [ɣ], [ʕ] and [ɦ] before voiced sounds, [x], [χ], [ħ] and [h] before voiceless consonants
Sulistaarroz[ɐˈʁos]'rice'
SpanishPuerto Ricancarro[ˈkaʁo]'car'Word-initial, and inter-vocallic double r ('rr') /r/ are commonly realized as a fricative trill in rural sectors and generally (but not exclusively) lower socioeconomic strata among Puerto Ricans. [ʁ].[40]
As spoken in Asturiasgusano[ʁ̞uˈsano]'worm'Most common allophone of /g/. May also be an approximant.[10][11]
SwedishSouthern dialectsrör[ʁɶʁ]'pipe(s)'See Swedish phonology
Tatarяңгыр, yañğır, ياڭگئر[jɒŋˈʁɯr]'rain'
Turkmenaɡyr / آغیٛر[ɑɡɨɾ]'heavy'An allophone of /ɣ/ next to back vowels
Tsezагъи aɣi[ˈʔaʁi]'bird'
Ubykh[ʁa]'his'Ubykh has ten different uvular fricatives. See Ubykh phonology
Uyghurئۇيغۇر / Уйғур[ʊjʁʊr]'Uyghur'
Uzbekoir / оғир / اۉغیر[ɒˈʁɨr]'heavy'
West FlemishBruges dialect[41]onder[ˈuŋəʀ̝]'under'A fricative trill with little friction. An alveolar [r] is used in the neighbouring rural area.[41]
Yakutтоҕус toğus[toʁus]'nine'

See also

Notes

References

External links