Approximant consonant
From Academic Kids
| Manners of articulation |
| Nasal |
| Plosive |
| Fricative |
| Affricate |
| Lateral |
| Approximant |
| Semivowel |
| Liquid |
| Flap/Tap |
| Trill |
| Ejective |
| Implosive |
| Click |
| This page contains phonetic information in IPA, which may not display correctly in some browsers. [Help] |
| [Edit] (http://academickids.com/encyclopedia/index.php?title=Template:Manner_of_articulation&action=edit) |
Approximants are speech sounds that could be regarded as intermediate between vowels and typical consonants. In the articulation of approximants, articulatory organs produce a narrowing of the vocal tract, but leave enough space for air to flow without much audible turbulence. Approximants are therefore more open than fricatives. This class of sounds includes lateral approximants like Template:IPA, as in lip, and the so-called semivowels Template:IPA and Template:IPA in yes and well.
Palatal approximants correspond to front vowels, velar approximants to back vowels, and labialized approximants to rounded vowels. They are typically briefer, less stable and often closer than the corresponding vowels.
When emphasized, approximants may be slightly fricated (that is, the airstream may become slightly turbulent), which is reminiscent of fricatives. Examples are the y of English yes! (especially when lengthened) and the "weak" allophones of Spanish b, d, g, which are often transcribed as fricatives (often due perhaps to a lack of dedicated approximant symbols). However, such frication is generally slight and intermittant, unlike the strong turbulence of fricative consonants.
This confusion is also common with voiceless approximants, which necessarily have a certain amount of fricative-like noise. For example, the voiceless labial-velar approximant Template:IPA is generally called a fricative, despite doubts that such doubly articulated fricatives are even possible. Tibetan has a voiceless lateral approximant, Template:IPA, and Welsh has a voiceless lateral fricative Template:IPA, but the distinction is not always clear from descriptions of these languages.
For the places of articulation further back in the mouth, languages do not contrast voiced fricatives and approximants. Therefore the IPA allows the symbols for the voiced fricatives to double up for the central approximants, with or without a lowering diacritic.
Occasionally the glottal "fricatives" are called approximants as well, but they are actually phonations of the glottis without any accompanying manner or place of articulation.
Central approximants
- bilabial approximant Template:IPA
- labiodental approximant Template:IPA
- alveolar approximant Template:IPA
- retroflex approximant Template:IPA
- palatal approximant Template:IPA
- velar approximant Template:IPA
- uvular approximant Template:IPA
- pharyngeal approximant Template:IPA
- epiglottal approximant Template:IPA
Doubly-articulated approximants
- voiced labial-velar approximant Template:IPA
- voiceless labial-velar approximant Template:IPA
- labial-palatal approximant Template:IPA
Lateral approximants
- alveolar lateral approximant Template:IPA
- velarized alveolar lateral approximant Template:IPA
- retroflex lateral approximant Template:IPA
- palatal lateral approximant Template:IPA
- velar lateral approximant Template:IPA
