Jump to content

Voiced labial–velar plosive

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.
Voiced labial–velar plosive
ɡ͡b
IPA Number110 (102)
Audio sample
Encoding
Entity (decimal)ɡ​͡​b
Unicode (hex)U+0261 U+0361 U+0062

The voiced labial–velar plosive is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages. It is a [ɡ] and [b] pronounced simultaneously and is considered a double articulation.[1] To make this sound, one can say go but with the lips closed as if one were saying Bo; the lips are to be released at the same time as or a fraction of a second after the g of go is pronounced. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is ⟨ɡ͡b⟩. Its voiceless counterpart is voiceless labial–velar plosive, [k͡p].

The voiced labial–velar plosive is commonly found in Niger-Congo languages, e.g. in Igbo (Volta-Congo) in the name [iɡ͡boː] itself; or in Bété (Atlantic-Congo), e.g. in the surname of Laurent Gbagbo [ɡ͡baɡ͡bo], former president of Ivory Coast.

Features

Features of the voiced labial–velar stop:

Occurrence

Language Word IPA Meaning Notes
Dyula gba [ɡ͡bɑ] 'bench'
Ega[2] [ɡ͡bá] 'finish'
Ewe Èʋegbe [èβeɡ͡be] 'Ewe language'
Igbo Igbo [iɡ͡boː] 'Igbo'
Kalabari[3] ágbá [áɡ͡bá] 'paint'
Kissi gbɛŋgbo [ɡ͡bɛŋɡ͡bɔ] 'stool'
Mono (Ubangian)[4] gba [ɡ͡ba] 'moisten'
Mundang[5] gbajole / ࢥَجٝلٜ [ɡ͡baɟole] 'to help'
Nigerian Pidgin[6] gbedu [ɡ͡bɛdu] 'beats' (of music) Phonemic. Found in substrate words and later loanwords from native Nigerian languages. See Languages of Nigeria.
Temne[7] gbara [kʌɡ͡bara] 'coconut'
Tyap a̠mgba̠m [əmɡ͡bəm] 'all'
Volow[8] nleevēn [n.lɛᵑᵐɡ͡bʷɛβɪn] 'woman' with labiovelar release
Yoruba gbogbo [ɡ͡boɡ͡bo] 'all'

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Catford & Esling 2006, p. 438:

    … the commonest double articulations consist of the simultaneous articulation of stops at two locations, most frequently labial-velar [kp] [gb], written [k͡p] [ɡ͡b] when the coarticulation has to be made explicit in transcription. This particular type of double articulation is often called ‘labiovelar,’ a term which must be avoided in a strictly systematic phonetic taxonomy in which the first half of such a compound term refers to the lower articulator.

  2. ^ Connell, Ahoua & Gibbon (2002:100)
  3. ^ Harry (2003:113)
  4. ^ Olson (2004:233); association with Niger-Congo uncertain.
  5. ^ Priest, Lorna A.; Hosken, Martin (12 August 2010). Proposal to add Arabic script characters for African and Asian languages (PDF). (Archive)
  6. ^ Faraclas (1996), pp. 248–249.
  7. ^ Ladefoged (1964)
  8. ^ François (2005:445)

References