| Voiced Postalveolar Fricative |
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The voiced palato-alveolar fricative or '''domed postalveolar fricative''' 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 Ezh , and the equivalent X-SAMPA symbol is Z. An alternative commonly used in linguistic works, particularly in older or American literature, is ž. FEATURES Features of the voiced postalveolar fricative:
IN ENGLISH The voiced postalveolar fricative occurs in English, although in only a handful of words, and is the sound denoted by the letter 's' in ''treasure'' and the final sound of the word ''mirage''. One of the very few minimal contrasts of the voiced and voiceless postalveolar fricatives (for some dialects only) is the pair of words ''allusion'' and ''Aleutian''. It usually occurs medially, but may occur word-initially or word-finally in relatively recent borrowings from French . In English the sound is labialized, , although few transcriptions bother with this level of detail. IN OTHER LANGUAGES The sound is more common in French , where it is represented by the letter J . The French consonant is labialized, , as in English. The sound is also notable in Rioplatense Spanish , spoken in Argentina and Uruguay , where the consonant ''ll'' takes on the sound. It also occurs in Russian and Bulgarian as a realization of , represented by the letter Ж (zhe). It also occurs in Czech , Slovak , Croatian , Serbian and Latvian , where it is represented by the letter ''Ž, ž''. It also occurs in Hungarian , represented by the digraph ''zs'' (see Hungarian Zs ). It also occurs in Ido , represented by the letter ''J''. It also occurs in Esperanto , represented by the letter Ĵ . It also occurs word-initially and word-medially in Ladino . SEE ALSO |