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Topic: Bilabial trill


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  Bilabial trill   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-01)
The bilabial trill 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 ʙ, and the equivalent X-SAMPA symbol is B\.
Its manner of articulation is trill, which means it is produced by vibrations of the articulators.
www.serebella.com /encyclopedia/article-Bilabial_trill.html   (300 words)

  
 Bilabial trill - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The bilabial trill is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages.
The known exceptions to this pattern are in Nias and the occasionally trilled fricative vowels of Yi.
In Pirahã, the bilabial trill is an allophone of /b/.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Bilabial_trill   (442 words)

  
 NationMaster - Encyclopedia: Voiced bilabial plosive
The voiced bilabial plosive occurs in English, and it is the sound denoted by the letter "b" in boy.
Bilabial Listen to this article · (info) This audio file was created from the revision dated 2005-07-20, and does not reflect subsequent edits to the article.
Glottal consonants are consonants articulated with the glottis.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Voiced-bilabial-plosive   (3405 words)

  
 Bilabial consonant - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In phonetics, a bilabial consonant is a consonant articulated with both lips.
The bilabial consonants identified by the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) are:
Owere Igbo has a six-way contrast among bilabial plosives: [p pʰ ɓ̥ b b̤ ɓ].
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Bilabial_consonant   (114 words)

  
 Rhotic consonant   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-01)
Trill (popularly known as rolled r): The airstream is interrupted several times one of the organs of speech (usually tip of the tongue or the uvula) vibrates closing and opening the air If a trill is made with the of the tongue against the upper gum speak of an apical (tongue-tip) alveolar trill.
A bilabial trill (sometimes represented as "brrr...") can be with both lips but is hardly ever as a speech segment (there are one two examples of such use worldwide).
In many languages are used as reduced variants of trills in fast speech.
www.freeglossary.com /Rhotic_consonant   (414 words)

  
 B - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In English and most other languages that use the Latin alphabet, the letter b denotes the voiced bilabial plosive (IPA /b/), as in bib.
In Estonian, Icelandic, and in Chinese transcription, B is not voiced, but is still contrasted to P, which is geminated /pp/ in Estonian and aspirated /pʰ/ in Chinese and Icelandic.
Variants of the letter b denote related bilabial consonants, like the voiced bilabial implosive and the bilabial trill.
www.wikipedia.org /wiki/B   (1155 words)

  
 International Phonetic Alphabet - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A few languages such as Banda have a bilabial flap as the preferred allophone of what is elsewhere a labiodental flap.
Similarly, a labiodental trill would be written [ʙ̪] (bilabial trill and the dental sign).
The remaining consonants, the uvular laterals and the palatal trill, while not strictly impossible, are very difficult to pronounce and are unlikely to occur even as allophones in the world's languages.
www.wikipedia.org /wiki/International_Phonetic_Alphabet   (4609 words)

  
 Places of articulation   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-01)
A few of them are physically impossible (e.g., velar trill, glottal lateral) -- these are shaded grey on the IPA consonant chart.
We can create a symbol for the voiced bilabial approximant by placing the "lowered" or "more open" diacritic (a small T with the line pointing downward) underneath the symbol for the voiced bilabial fricative, the Greek letter beta.
A voiced uvualar trill or fricative (depending on the dialect) is used for the R sound of European French and increasingly in Canadian French.
www.umanitoba.ca /linguistics/russell/138/sec5/s5-poa.htm   (899 words)

  
 The Global Advisor Newsletter - Translation Technology. The World's Endangered Languages
OroWin is what linguists refer to as a VOS (Verb/direct Object/Subject) language, where the verb is placed before its object and both the verb and its object precede the subject (e.g.
In English, the sound is represented as "tp~" and pronounced as the "t" consonant sound followed immediately by what linguists call a "bilabial trill." This sounds like a person releasing air between vibrating lips in imitation of a snorting horse.
It has the same "bilabial trill," sound of the Oro Win and the fewest consonants (seven) and vowels (three) of any known language.
www.intersolinc.com /newsletters/newsletter_21.htm   (1146 words)

  
 Discount Ebook Marketing
First the beginning of ag, as it is a major set point in devpt marketing degree of human civilization.
Variants of the letter b denote related bilabial consonants, like discount ebook marketing voiced bilabial implosive and the bilabial trill.
Some, such as technocrats, argue the reverse, at least in the long term.
marketing.flywebs.com /discount-ebook-marketing.html   (764 words)

  
 Bilabial trill - FrathWiki
The bilabial trill is an easy sound for most people to make, yet it is used phonemically in very few natlangs.
If you can contribute to its content, feel free to do so.
Unless otherwise stated, this work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
wiki.frath.net /Bilabial_trill   (54 words)

  
 untitled
Once the voting started we had already tons of strange exotic sounds, some were vetoed, others were accepted:
Things started to slow down when summer hollidays put everybody back at work, I closed phas one as we had enough sounds, for our language: 21 consonants and 7 vowels.
Here is the list in SAMPA, exept for the bilabial trill and the central,open-mid,rounded,nasal.
www.ifrance.com /decker/Langg$.htm   (613 words)

  
 languagehat.com: PIRAHA AND WHORF.
I was googling to find out the status of that bilabial trill.
I remember Dan Everett reporting on it on Linguist List and Comrie suggesting that Abkhaz had a similar sound and in the process I found this link
Bilabial trill: a phonetics textbook I used to have (authored or perhaps co-authored by Ladefoged) described this sound as existing in "the North African language Margi".
www.languagehat.com /archives/001506.php   (1370 words)

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