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The breathy-voiced glottal transition, commonly called a voiced glottal fricative, is a type of sound used in some spoken languages which patterns like a fricative or approximant consonant phonologically, but often lacks the usual phonetic characteristics of a consonant. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is ⟨ɦ⟩, and the equivalent X-SAMPA symbol is h\.
In many languages, [ɦ] has no place or manner of articulation. For this reason, it has been described as a breathy-voiced counterpart of the following vowel from a phonetic point of view. However, its characteristics are also influenced by the preceding vowels and whatever other sounds surround it, so it can be described as a segment whose only consistent feature is its breathy voice phonation, in such languages.[1] It may have real glottal constriction in a number of languages (such as Finnish[2]), making it a fricative.
Lamé language contrasts voiceless and voiced glottal fricatives.[3]
Features of the voiced glottal fricative:
Manner of articulation, Labial consonant, Palatal consonant, Epiglottal consonant, Phonation
Larynx, Burmese language, Voice (phonetics), Glottis, Tone (linguistics)
Cyrillic script, Manner of articulation, Place of articulation, International Phonetic Alphabet, Voiced glottal fricative
Place of articulation, Manner of articulation, ɾ̼, International Phonetic Alphabet, Sibilant consonant
Open back unrounded vowel, Close-mid back rounded vowel, Canada, United Kingdom, Close front unrounded vowel
Manner of articulation, Place of articulation, International Phonetic Alphabet, Arabic language, Hebrew language
Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Devanagari, Urdu