Labial–alveolar consonant

Labial–alveolar consonants are doubly articulated consonants that are co-articulated at the lips and the front part of the tongue against the alveolar ridge or the alveolar ridge and the teeth. They are only attested in Yele, an unclassified language of Rossel Island, Papua New Guinea.

Types

Several labial–alveolar consonants are attested in Yele, where the alveolar contact is more precisely denti-alveolar: a voiceless plosive /t̪͡p/, a nasal /n̪͡m/, and prenasalized /n̪͡md̪͡b/ (also analyzed as /n̪͡mt̪͡p/ but phonetically voiced), of which /t̪͡pʲ/ and /n̪͡md̪͡bʲ/ may also occur palatalized.

References

Uses material from the Wikipedia article Labial–alveolar consonant, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.