| Voiced Alveolar Fricative |
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| alveolar consonants | |
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The voiced alveolar fricatives are Consonant al sounds. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents these sounds depends on whether a Sibilant or non-sibilant fricative is being described.
THE VOICED ALVEOLAR SIBILANT Features Features of the voiced alveolar fricative:
In English The voiced alveolar fricative occurs in English, and it is the sound denoted by the letter 'z' in ''zoo'' or the letter 's' in ''roses''. THE VOICED ALVEOLAR NON-SIBILANT FRICATIVE Features The features of the voiceless alveolar non-sibilant fricative are identical to those above, except that,
Found in ;English In some urban South Africa n dialects of English, is pronounced , while in Scouse , can sometimes have either this sound or a corresponding Affricate . (Marotta and Barth 2005) ;Icelandic The Icelandic letter ð (eth) is used for this sound. (It is replaced by þ (thorn) at the beginning of a word, where it is a Voiceless Alveolar Non-sibilant Fricative . Old English had a similar Allophonic distribution but used the letters þ and ð indiscrimately for both the Voiceless and Voiced Dental Fricative ; in modern English both are replaced by the diagraph "th".) Icelandic is usually Apical , whereas is Laminal .
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