Voiced Bilabial Plosive Article Index for
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Information About

Voiced Bilabial Plosive




The voiced bilabial plosive 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. The voiced bilabial plosive occurs in English , and it is the sound denoted by the letter "b" in ''boy''.


FEATURES


Features of the voiced bilabial plosive:



IN ENGLISH


is one of the few phonemes in English that has a one-to-one correspondence with a letter. It is always denoted by "b", and excluding a handful of words that are spelled with a silent "b" (e.g. ''doubt'' and ''lamb''), it is always pronounced [b .


IN OTHER LANGUAGES


In many languages, such as German or Russian, a final letter b is pronounced soundless, as P or .


Greek


In Ancient Greek , the letter β was pronounced but it is now pronounced [ V . Modern Greek [b] (mostly in loan words) is spelled μπ (mp).


Spanish


Spanish has [b]. It is denoted by "b", as in ''bombero'' (firefighter). In many dialects, it may also be denoted by a word-initial "v", as in ''veinte'' (twenty). Standard European Spanish uses the sound [ β ]


SEE ALSO