Voiceless palatal fricative

Voiceless palatal fricative
ç
IPA number 138
Encoding
Entity (decimal) ç
Unicode (hex) U+00E7
X-SAMPA C
Kirshenbaum C
Braille ⠖ (braille pattern dots-235)⠉ (braille pattern dots-14)
Sound
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The voiceless palatal fricative is a type of consonantal sound used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is ç. The symbol ç is the letter c with a cedilla, as used to spell French and Portuguese words such as façade and ação. However, the sound represented by the letter ç in French, Portuguese and English orthography is not a voiceless palatal fricative but /s/, the voiceless alveolar fricative.

Palatal fricatives are relatively rare phonemes, and only 5% of the world's languages have /ç/ as a phoneme.[1] The sound occurs, however, as an allophone of /x/ in German, or, in other languages, of /h/ in the vicinity of front vowels.

There is also a voiceless post-palatal fricative (also called pre-velar, fronted velar etc.) in some languages.

Features

Features of the voiceless palatal fricative:

Occurrence

Language Word IPA Meaning Notes
Assamese সীমা/xima [çima] 'limit/border'
Azerbaijani[2] Some dialects çörək [tʃœˈɾæç] 'bread' Allophone of /c/.
Berber Kabyle til [çtil] 'to measure'
Danish Standard[3] pjaske [ˈpçæsɡ̊ə] 'splash' May be alveolo-palatal [ɕ] instead.[3] Before /j/, aspiration in /pʰ, tˢ, kʰ/ is realized as devoicing and fortition of /j/.[3] Note, however, that the sequence /tˢj/ is normally realized as an affricate [t͡ɕ].[4] See Danish phonology
Dutch Standard Belgian[5] acht [ɑç̠t] 'eight' Post-palatal; may be velar [x] instead.[5] See Dutch phonology
Southern accents[5]
Standard Netherlandic[5] wiegje [ˈʋiçjə] 'crib' Allophone of /x/ before /j/ for some speakers.[5] See Dutch phonology
English Australian[6] hue [çʉː] 'hue' Phonetic realization of the sequence /hj/.[6][7][8] See Australian English phonology and English phonology
British[7][8]
Scouse[9] like [laɪ̯ç] 'like' Allophone of /k/; ranges from palatal to uvular, depending on the preceding vowel.[9] See English phonology
Finnish vihko [ˈʋiçko̞] 'notebook' Allophone of /h/. See Finnish phonology
German nicht  [nɪçt]  'not' Allophone of /x/. See German phonology
Greek[10] ψυχή  [ps̠iˈç̠i]  'soul' Post-palatal.[10] See Modern Greek phonology
Haida xíl [çɪ́l] 'leaf'
Hungarian[11] kapj [ˈkɒpç] 'get' (imperative) Allophone of /j/ between a voiceless obstruent and a word boundary. See Hungarian phonology
Icelandic hérna [ˈçɛrtn̥a] 'here' See Icelandic phonology
Irish a Sheáin [ə çaːnʲ] 'John' (voc.) See Irish phonology
Japanese[12] /hito [çi̥to̞] 'person' Allophone of /h/ before /i/ and /j/. See Japanese phonology
Korean /him [çim] 'strength' Allophone of /h/ word-initially before /i/ and /j/. See Korean phonology
Limburgish Weert dialect[13] ich [ɪ̞ç̠] 'I' Post-palatal; allophone of /x/ before and after front vowels.[13]
Norwegian Standard Eastern[14] kjekk [çɛ̝kː] 'handsome' Often alveolo-palatal [ɕ] instead; younger speakers in Bergen, Stavanger and Oslo merge it with /ʂ/.[14] See Norwegian phonology
Pashto Ghilji dialect[15] پښه [pça] 'foot'
Wardak dialect
Romanian Muntenian dialects[16] fir [çir] 'thread' Allophone of /f/ before /i/.[16] Realized as [f] in standard Romanian. See Romanian phonology
Scottish Gaelic[17] eich [eç] 'horses'
Spanish Chilean[18] mujer [muˈçe̞r] 'woman' Allophone of /x/ before front vowels. See Spanish phonology
Uzbek[19] Post-palatal;[19] weakly fricated.[19] Occurs word-initially and pre-consonantally, otherwise it is post-velar.[19]
Walloon texhe [tɛç] 'to knit'

See also

Notes

References

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