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Voiceless palatal lateral fricative

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The voiceless palatal lateral fricative is a type of consonantal sound, used in a few spoken languages.

This is a rare sound. Dahalo has both a palatal lateral fricative and an affricate; Hadza has a series of affricates.

The IPA has no dedicated symbol for this sound. The devoicing and raising diacritics may be used to transcribe it: <ʎ̥˔>. However, the "belt" on the existing symbol for a voiceless lateral fricative, <ɬ>, forms the basis for occasional ad hoc symbols for the other lateral fricatives, the third one representing the palatal lateral fricative:

Image:Lateral fricatives.png

Indeed, SIL International has added these symbols to the Private Use Areas of their Charis and Doulos fonts, as U+F267 ().

[edit] Features

Features of the voiceless palatal lateral fricative:

[edit] Occurrence

Language Word IPA Meaning Notes
Dahalo aːbu 'leaf' Contrasts with [ɬ] and [ɬʷ].
Hadza tla'a caʔa 'to follow', 'to meet' The Hadza lateral fricative is [ɬ]. Ejective [cʼ] contrasts with velar [kʼ], an allophone of [kxʼ]

[edit] See also

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