Voiced retroflex flap

Consonantal sound represented by ⟨ɽ⟩ in IPA From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Voiced retroflex flap

The voiced retroflex flap is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is ɽ, a letter r with tail, and the equivalent X-SAMPA symbol is r`.

Quick Facts ɽ, IPA number ...
Voiced retroflex flap
ɽ
IPA number125
Audio sample
Encoding
Entity (decimal)ɽ
Unicode (hex)U+027D
X-SAMPAr`
Braille
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Features

Features of the voiced retroflex flap:

Occurrence

More information Language, Word ...
LanguageWordIPAMeaningNotes
Bengali[1] গাড়ি [ɡaɽi] 'car' Apical postalveolar.[1] See Bengali phonology
Dutch[2][3] North Brabant[4] riem [ɽim] 'belt' A rare word-initial variant of /r/.[5][6] Realization of /r/ varies considerably among dialects. See Dutch phonology
Northern Netherlands[4][7]
Elfdalian luv [ɽʏːv] 'permission'
Enga la [jɑɽɑ] 'shame'
Gokana[8] bele [beːɽeː] 'we' Apical postalveolar. Allophone of /l/, medially between vowels within the morpheme, and finally in the morpheme before a following vowel in the same word. It can be a postalveolar trill or simply [l] instead.[8]
Hausa bara [bəɽä] 'servant' Represented in Arabic script with ر
Hindustani[9] Hindi ड़ा [bəɽäː] 'big' Apical postalveolar; contrasts unaspirated and aspirated forms.[9] See Hindustani phonology
Urdu بڑا
Nepali[10] भाडा [bʱäɽä] 'rent' Apical postalveolar; postvocalic allophone of /ɖ, ɖʱ/.[11] See Nepali phonology
Norwegian Central dialects[12] blad [bɽɑː] 'leaf' Allophone of /l/ and /r/. In Urban East Norwegian it often alternates with the alveolar [ɾ], save for a small number of words.[12][13] See Norwegian phonology
Eastern dialects[12][13]
Odia[14] ଗାଡ଼ି [ɡäɽiː] 'car' Apical postalveolar; postvocalic allophone of /ɖ, ɖʱ/.[14]
Okinawan karatii [kaɽatii] 'karate' Intervocalic allophone of /ɾ/.
Parkari Koliۿُونَواڙ[ɦuːnaʋaːɽ]'desolate, deserted'
Portuguese Some European speakers[15] falar [fɐˈläɽ] 'to speak' Allophone of /ɾ/. See Portuguese phonology
Brazilian caipira speakers[16][17] madeira [mäˈd̪eɽə] 'wood'
Some sertanejo speakers[18] gargalhar [ɡäɽɡäˈʎäɽ] 'to guffaw'
Punjabi[19] Gurmukhi ਘੋੜਾ [gʱòːɽaː] 'horse'
Shahmukhi گھوڑا
Scottish Gaelic Lewis thuirt [hʉɽʈ] 'said' Possible realisation of /rˠ/.
Shipibo[20] roro [ˈɽo̽ɽo̽] 'to break' Apical postalveolar; possible realization of /r/.[20]
Swedish Some dialects[13] blad [bɽɑː(d)] 'leaf' Allophone of /l/ and /ɖ/. See Swedish phonology
Tamil நாடு / نَاڊُ [naːɽɯ] 'country' Intervocalic and word-medial allophone of /ʈ/. See Tamil phonology
Telugu గోడు [goːɽu] 'grief' Allophone of /ɖ/
Tukano[21] Ye’pâ-Masa petâ-de [pɛ̀ɛ̥̀táɽɛ᷆] '(relative to the) port' Realisation of d in certain positions. Nasalised [ɽ͂] in nasal contexts.[21]
Wapishana[22] [pɨɖaɽɨ] 'your father'
Warlpiri jarda [caɽa] 'sleep' Transcribes /ɽ/ as rd.
Yidiny[23] [gambi:ɽ] 'tablelands'
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See also

Notes

References

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