VelarizationAmerican or velarisationBritish is a secondary articulation of by which the back of the tongue is raised toward the soft palate during the articulation of the consonant.
In the International Phonetic Alphabet, velarization is transcribed by one of four diacritics:
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A tilde or swung dash through the letter covers velarization, uvularization and pharyngealization, as in (the velarized equivalent of )
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A superscript Latin gamma after the letter standing for the velarized consonant, as in (a velarized )
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To distinguish velarization from a velar fricative release, may be used instead of
[Vd. Tryon (1995) ''Comparative Austronesian Dictionary"]
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A superscript indicates either simultaneous velarization and labialization, as in or , or labialization of a velar consonant, as in .
Although electropalatographic studies have shown that there is a continuum of possible degrees of velarization,
[ citing
] the IPA does not specify any way to indicate degrees of velarization, as the difference has not been found to be contrastive in any language. However, the IPA convention of doubling diacritics to indicate a greater degree can be used: .
Examples
English
A common example of a velarized consonant is the velarized alveolar lateral approximant (or "dark L"). In some accents of English, such as Received Pronunciation and arguably
General American, the
phoneme has "dark" and "light" allophones: the "dark", velarized allophone appears in
syllable coda position (e.g. in
fu ll ), while the "light", non-velarized allophone appears in syllable onset position (e.g. in lawn). Other accents of English, such as
Scottish English, Australian English, and potentially standard U.S. and Canadian accents, have "dark L" in all positions.
Velarized /l/
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Albanian phonemically contrasts light l and dark ll
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Catalan dialect and allophonic variance
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Portuguese dialect and allophonic variance
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Turkish
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Kurdish
For many languages, velarization is generally associated with more dental articulations of coronal consonants so that dark l tends to be dental or dentoalveolar, and clear l tends to be retracted to an alveolar position.
Other velarized consonants
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Danish language realizes in some environments as a velarized .
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Irish language and Marshallese have velarized consonants that systematically contrast with palatalized consonants.
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Similarly, Russian language has velarized consonants as allophones of the non-palatalized (plain) series, especially prominent before and with labial consonant and as well as the lateral.
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Scottish Gaelic has a three-way contrast in nasal consonant and laterals between and
[Bauer, Michael. Blas na Gàidhlig: The Practical Guide to Gaelic Pronunciation. Glasgow: Akerbeltz, 2011.]
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Kurdish language has three velarized consonants (, , and ) which contrast with plain ones.
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Gilbertese has three velarized consonants (/mˠ/, /pˠ/, and /βˠ/), two of which (/mˠ/ and /pˠ/) contrast with a plain form.
The palatalized/velarized contrast is known by other names, especially in language pedagogy: in Irish and Scottish Gaelic language teaching, the terms slender (for palatalized) and broad (for velarized) are often used. In Scottish Gaelic the terms are caol (for palatalized) and leathann (for velarized).
The terms light or clear (for non-velarized or palatalized) and dark (for velarized) are also widespread. The terms " soft l " and " hard l " are not equivalent to "light l " and "dark l ". The former pair refers to palatalized ("soft" or iotation) and plain ("hard") Slavic languages consonants.
Sources