| Bilabial Trill |
Article Index for Bilabial |
Information AboutBilabial Trill |
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| trills | |
| bilabial consonants | |
| SHOPPER'S DELIGHT | |
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The bilabial trill is a type of Consonant al sound, used in some Spoken Language s. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is , and the equivalent X-SAMPA symbol is B\. FEATURES Features of the bilabial trill:
IN ENGLISH English does not have a bilabial trill in any words. It does however use a rather loose bilabial trill to express that one is shivering cold, which is spelled ''brrr''. IN OTHER LANGUAGES The bilabial trill exists as a phoneme in a few languages. In most of the languages where it occurs, it occurs only as a prenasalised bilabial stop with trilled release, . This developed historically from a prenasalized stop before a relatively high Back Vowel , such as , in all but a couple languages, and are usually still limited to such environments. An example is the Kele word "its fruit". The known exceptions to this pattern are in Nias and the occasionally trilled fricative vowels of Yi . Some languages, such as Mangbetu (spoken in North-Eastern Zaire ) and Mewun (spoken in Vanuatu ), may have both Voiced and Voiceless bilabial trill. Amuzgo Amuzg has the bilabial trill, but uses it only exceptionally. Baka Baka (spoken in Vanuatu ) has the bilabial trill, but it is used rarely. Northwest Caucasian Languages In Abkhaz and Ubykh , the "affricates" are Allophone s of . Pirahã In Pirahã, the bilabial trill is an allophone of /b/. Yi Liangshang (Cool Mountain) Yi has two "buzzed" or fricative vowels, written ṳ, i̤, which may also be trilled, . EXTERNAL LINKS SEE ALSO |