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Syllabic consonant

A syllabic consonant is a consonant which either forms a syllable of its own, or is the nucleus of a syllable. The diacritic for this in the International Phonetic Alphabet is the under-stroke, . It has Unicode code point U+329. As with all IPA combining characters, the diacritic must be entered after the letter it modifies.

Examples from English are button , bottle . Note that all of these consonants are sonorants.

Sanskrit [] (and Vedic Sanskrit []) are syllabic consonants, allophones of consonantal and . This continues the reconstructed situation of Proto-Indo-European, where both nasals and liquids had syllabic allophones, .

The Czech and Slovak r and l may also be syllabic, as in the phrase - Str? prst skrz krk ("thrust the finger through the neck"). In addition, Slovak also has long versions of these syllabic consonants, ? and ?: k?b (joint), v?ba (willow)

The only time obstruents are used syllabically in English is in onomatopoeia, such as sh! (a command to be quiet), sss (the hiss of a snake), zzz (the sound of a bee buzzing or someone sleeping), and tsk tsk! (used to express disapproval or pity), though it's not certain how to define what a syllable is in such cases.

Berber, Salish, and Wakashan languages are sometimes used to illustrate syllabic obstruents in normal vocabulary, such as Bella Coola , "northeast wind", "seal blubber", "wet", "dry", or "we () used to () sing ()". However, it is not clear how one would define a syllable or a syllabic nucleus in such cases, and it's therefore not clear whether any of these consonants should be considered syllabic.

There are "fricative vowels" in several languages, which are actually syllabic fricatives. In Mandarin these are written s? , sh? , r? . Standard Liangshan Yi has two "buzzed" vowels, written , which are also syllabic fricatives, , and may even be trilled .

See also

br:Kensonenn silabennek fr:Consonne syllabique he:????? ??????





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