Voiceless labial–velar plosive

The voiceless labial–velar plosive or stop is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages. It is a [k] and [p] pronounced simultaneously. To make this sound, one can say Coe but with the lips closed as if one were saying Poe; the lips are to be released at the same time as or a fraction of a second after the C of Coe. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is k͡p.

Voiceless labial–velar plosive
k͡p
IPA Number109 (101)
Audio sample
Encoding
Entity (decimal)k​͡​p
Unicode (hex)U+006B U+0361 U+0070

The voiceless labial–velar plosive is found in Vietnamese and various languages in West and Central Africa. In Yoruba it is written with a simple ⟨p⟩.

Features

Features of the voiceless labial–velar stop:

Occurrence

LanguageWordIPAMeaningNotes
Dangme[1]kpà[k͡pà]'to roam'
Ega[2][k͡pá]'build a hedge to enclose a field'
Ibibio[3]kpa[k͡pɐ́]'to die'
Igbo[4]kpọ́ [k͡pɔ́]'call'
Kalabari[5]àkpà[àk͡pà]'bag'
Mono[6]kpa[k͡pa]'flee'
Nigerian Pidgin[7][example needed]Phonemic. Found in substrate words and later loanwords from native Nigerian languages. See Languages of Nigeria.
Saramaccan[8]akpó[ak͡pó]'arrow type'Possibly allophonic with /kʷ/, but possibly phonemic as well
Vietnamese[9]c[luk͡p˧˥]'time'Allophone of /k/ after /u, o, ɔ/. See Vietnamese phonology
Tyapkpa[k͡pa]'pestle'
Yorubapápá[k͡pák͡pá]'field'

Rounded variant

Voiceless labialized labial–velar plosive
k͡pʷ

Some languages, especially in Papua New Guinea and in Vanuatu, combine this voiceless labial–velar stop with a labial–velar approximant release, hence [k͡pʷ]. Thus Mwotlap (Banks Islands, north Vanuatu) has [k͡pʷɪlɣɛk] ('my father-in-law').[10]

In the Banks Islands languages which have it, the phoneme /k͡pʷ/ is written q in local orthographies.In other languages of Vanuatu further south (such as South Efate, or Lenakel), the same segment is spelled .

See also

Notes

References

External links