Voiced Palatal Lateral Approximant

The voiced palatal lateral approximant is a type of consonantal sound used in some spoken languages.

The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is ʎ, a rotated lowercase letter ⟨y⟩, and the equivalent X-SAMPA symbol is L.

Voiced palatal lateral approximant
ʎ
IPA Number157
Audio sample
Encoding
Entity (decimal)ʎ
Unicode (hex)U+028E
X-SAMPAL
Braille⠦ (braille pattern dots-236)⠽ (braille pattern dots-13456)
Voiced alveolo-palatal lateral approximant
l̠ʲ
ʎ̟

Many languages that were previously thought to have a palatal lateral approximant actually have a lateral approximant that is, broadly, alveolo-palatal; that is to say, it is articulated at a place in-between the alveolar ridge and the hard palate (excluded), and it may be variously described as alveolo-palatal, lamino-postalveolar, or postalveolo-prepalatal. None of the 13 languages investigated by Recasens (2013), many of them Romance, has a 'true' palatal. That is likely the case for several other languages listed here. Some languages, like Portuguese and Catalan, have a lateral approximant that varies between alveolar and alveolo-palatal.

There is no dedicated symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents the alveolo-palatal lateral approximant. If precision is desired, it may be transcribed l̠ʲ or ʎ̟; they are essentially equivalent because the contact includes both the blade and body (but not the tip) of the tongue. There is also a non-IPA letter U+0234 ȴ LATIN SMALL LETTER L WITH CURL; ȴ ("l", plus the curl found in the symbols for alveolo-palatal sibilant fricatives ɕ, ʑ) is used especially in Sinological circles.

The voiced palatal lateral approximant contrasts phonemically with its voiceless counterpart /ʎ̥/ in the Xumi language spoken in China.

Features

Cased forms of the IPA letter in the Pilagá alphabet. The capital is not supported by Unicode.

Features of the voiced palatal lateral approximant:

Occurrence

Language Word IPA Meaning Notes
Albanian Malsia e Madhe lule [ˈʎuʎɛ] 'flower'
Arbëresh
Arvanitika
Aragonese agulla [a̠ˈɣuʎa̠] 'needle'
Aromanian ljepuri [ˈʎe̞puri] 'rabbit'
Astur-Leonese Asturian llingua [ˈʎĩŋɡwa̝] 'language' Where /ʎ/ is absent and replaced by different sounds (depending on dialect), a phenomenon known as che vaqueira, its corresponding sounds are spelled ḷḷ.
Leonese
Mirandese lhéngua [ˈʎɛ̃ɡwɐ]
Aymara llaki [ʎaki] 'sad'
Basque bonbilla [bo̞mbiʎa̠] 'bulb'
Breton familh [fa̠miʎ] 'family'
Bulgarian любов [ʎuˈbof] 'love' Alveolo-palatal. See Bulgarian phonology
Catalan Standard llac [ˈʎ̟a̠k] 'lake' Alveolo-palatal. See Catalan phonology
Eastern Aragon clau [ˈkʎ̟a̠ʊ̯] 'key' Allophone of /l/ in consonant clusters.
Chipaya lloqa [ʎoqa] 'bank' See Chipaya languages
English Australian million [ˈmɪʎən] 'million' A frequent allophone of the sequence /lj/
Canadian (Atlantic and Newfoundland)
County Donegal Allophone of the sequence /lj/.
General American A frequent allophone of the sequence /lj/; sometimes realized as [jj]. See English phonology
Hiberno-English A frequent allophone of the sequence /lj/
New England
New York City
New Zealand
Received Pronunciation
South African
Southern American
Philippine gorilla [goˈɾɪʎɐ] 'gorilla' Common realization of ⟨ll⟩ between vowels due to Spanish influence.[citation needed]
Enindhilyagwa angalya [aŋal̠ʲa] 'place' Laminal post-alveolar
Faroese telgja [ˈtʰɛʎt͡ʃa] 'to carve' Allophone of /l/ before palatal consonants. Sometimes voiceless [ʎ̥]. See Faroese phonology
Franco-Provençal balyi [baʎi] 'give'
French Some dialects papillon [papiʎɒ̃] 'butterfly' Corresponds to /j/ in modern standard French. See French phonology
Galician Standard illado [iˈʎa̠ðo̝] 'insulated' Most Galician speakers, especially the urban and younger populations, are nowadays yeístas because of influence from Spanish
Greek ήλιος 'sun' Postalveolar. See Modern Greek phonology
Hungarian Northern dialects lyuk [ʎuk] 'hole' Alveolo-palatal. Modern Standard Hungarian has undergone a phenomenon akin to Spanish yeísmo, merging /ʎ/ into /j/. See Hungarian ly and Hungarian phonology
Irish duille [ˈd̪ˠɪl̠ʲə] 'leaf' Alveolo-palatal. Some dialects contrast it with palatalized alveolar /lʲ/. See Irish phonology
Italian figlio 'son' Alveolo-palatal. Realized as fricative [ʎ̝] in a large number of accents. See Italian phonology
Ivilyuat Iviuɂat [ʔivɪʎʊʔat] 'the speaking [Ivilyuat]' ('Ivilyuat language')
Jaqaru allaka [a'ʎaka] 'pumpkin' See Jaqaru Language
Jebero llinllin [ʎinʎin] 'name' See Jebero Language
Korean Seoul dialect 천리마 / cheollima [t͡ɕʰʌ̹ʎʎima̠] 'qianlima' /l/ is palatalized to [ʎ] before /i, j/ and before palatal consonant allophones
Latvian ļaudis [ʎàwdis] 'people' See Latvian phonology
Mapudungun aylla [ˈɐjʎɜ] 'nine' See Mapuche language
Norwegian Northern and central dialects alle [ɑʎːe] 'all' See Norwegian phonology
Occitan Standard miralhar [miɾa̠ˈʎa̠] 'to reflect' See Occitan phonology
Paiwan Standard veljevelj [vəʎəvəʎ] 'banana' See Paiwan language
Paez silli [siʎi] 'reed' See Paezan languages
Portuguese Standard alho [ˈaʎu] 'garlic' Alveolo-palatal in European Portuguese. May instead be [lʲ], [l] (Northeast) or [j] (Caipira), especially before unrounded vowels. See Portuguese phonology
Many dialects sandália [sɐ̃ˈda̠l̠ʲɐ] 'sandal' Possible realization of post-stressed /li/ plus vowel.
Quechua qallu [qaʎʊ] 'tongue'
Romanian Transylvanian dialects lingură [ˈʎinɡurə] 'spoon' Corresponds to [l][in which environments?] in standard Romanian. See Romanian phonology
Scottish Gaelic till [tʲʰiːʎ] 'return' Alveolo-palatal.[citation needed] See Scottish Gaelic phonology
Serbo-Croatian љуљaшка / ljuljaška [ʎ̟ǔʎ̟äːʂkä] 'swing (seat)' Palato-alveolar. See Serbo-Croatian phonology
Sissano piyl [piʎ] 'fish'
Slovak ľúbiť 'to love' Merges with /l/ in western dialects. See Slovak phonology
Spanish Andean (from Argentina to Colombia) caballo [ka̠ˈβ̞a̠.ʎo̞] 'horse' Found in traditional speakers in Peninsular Spanish. Also found in Andean countries and Paraguay. For most speakers, this sound has merged with /ʝ/, a phenomenon called yeísmo. See Spanish phonology. "Caballo" with yeísmo is pronounced [ka̠ˈβ̞a̠.ʝo̞]
Castilian, Aragonese and Catalonian outside of large cities
Central areas in Extremadura
Eastern and southwestern Manchego[citation needed]
Murcian
Paraguayan
Philippine
Very few areas in Andalusia
Xumi Lower [ʎ̟o˩˥] 'musk deer' Alveolo-palatal; contrasts with the voiceless /ʎ̥/.
Upper [ʎ̟ɛ˦] 'correct, right'

See also

Notes

References

Tags:

Voiced Palatal Lateral Approximant FeaturesVoiced Palatal Lateral Approximant OccurrenceVoiced Palatal Lateral ApproximantConsonantInternational Phonetic AlphabetLanguageSpeechX-SAMPA

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