trills and spills

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Page 1: Trills And Spills

Consonants 2

The trills keep coming

Page 2: Trills And Spills

trrrrrills

• rolling your rs

• tongue raises and falls away and raises to the alveolar ridge [r]

• do it just once and you have a flap or tap

• The symbol for this is ɾ or ɾ• bilabial trills in Melanesia B

• Uvular trills for French ‘r’

Page 3: Trills And Spills

Liquids

• Liquids are a subset of approximants and include l and the English r

• English [r] really upside r is not a trill• The tongue does not touch the alveolar ridge but

points to it. For some speakers there is a slight bending backwards of the tip of the tongue too

• [l] is a lateral. Tongue raises to the alveolar ridge, but the sides of the tongue are lowered allowing air to escape over the sides

Page 4: Trills And Spills

Non-liquid approximants

• Called a semi-vowel or glides

• [j] front of the tongue raises near the palate so narrowing but not noisy. Palatal glide:

• [w] is also a semi-vowel the tongue raises like [j] but at the velum. Also note lip-rounding labio-velar glide.

Page 5: Trills And Spills

retroflexible!

• Retroflex always appears as a place• but a cross between a place and a manner.• Bend backwards – tongue curls up further than

with other consonants• so you can get retroflex stops, fricatives,

affricates, nasals• all the symbols have a tail which points to the

right

Page 6: Trills And Spills

Larger groupings• In language we often find that sounds of the same

manner behave the same way or sounds of the same place exhibit special behaviour

• But often these special behaviours are exhibited across larger groupings

• Obstruents Stops + fricatives + affricates• Stop flow of air, voiced and voiceless, frequently

voiceless• Sonorants nasals, liquids (l+r)• Louder, more frequently voiced in language • Non-Pulmonic, clicks, ejectives, and implosives