Alveolar lateral click (plain) |
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ǁ | |||
ʖ | |||
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IPA number | 180 | ||
Encoding | |||
Entity (decimal) | ǁ |
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Unicode (hex) | U+01C1 | ||
X-SAMPA | |\|\ |
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Kirshenbaum | tl! |
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Sound | |||
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Voiced alveolar lateral click | |
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ǁ̬ | |
ᶢǁ | |
ʖ̬ | |
ᶢʖ | |
Encoding | |
Kirshenbaum | dl! |
Alveolar nasal lateral click | |
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ǁ̃ | |
ᵑǁ | |
ʖ̃ | |
ᵑʖ | |
Encoding | |
Kirshenbaum | nl! |
The lateral clicks are a family of click consonants found only in African languages. The clicking sound used by equestrians to urge on their horses is a lateral click, although it is not a speech sound in that context. Alveolar lateral clicks are found throughout southern Africa and in two languages in Tanzania.
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Most lateral clicks are alveolar. These are found in all Khoisan languages as well as in several Bantu languages. The only languages with non-alveolar lateral clicks are in the Juu family (see below).
The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents the place of articulation of these sounds is ⟨ǁ⟩, a double pipe. Prior to 1989, ⟨ʖ⟩ was the IPA representation of the tenuis alveolar lateral click, and this is still preferred by some phoneticians, as the pipe may be confounded with prosody marks and, in some fonts, with a double el. Either letter may be combined with a second letter to indicate the manner of articulation, though this is commonly omitted for tenuis clicks, and increasingly a diacritic is used instead. Common alveolar lateral clicks are:
IPA I | IPA II | Description |
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[ǁ] or [ʖ] | tenuis alveolar lateral click | |
[ǁʰ] or [ʖʰ] | aspirated alveolar lateral click | |
[ǁ̬] or [ʖ̬] | [ᶢǁ] or [ᶢʖ] | voiced alveolar lateral click |
[ǁ̃] or [ʖ̃] | [ᵑǁ] or [ᵑʖ] | nasal alveolar lateral click |
[ǁ̥̃ʰ] or [ʖ̥̃ʰ] | [ᵑ̊ǁʰ] or [ᵑ̊ʖʰ] | aspirated nasal alveolar lateral click |
[ǁˀ, ǁ̥̃ˀ] or [ʖˀ, ʖ̥̃ˀ] | [ᵑ̊ǁˀ] or [ᵑ̊ʖˀ]) | glottalized nasal alveolar lateral click |
The last is what is heard in the sound sample above, as non-native speakers tend to glottalize clicks to avoid nasalizing them.
Features of alveolar lateral clicks:
English does not have a lateral click (or any click consonant, for that matter) as a phoneme, but a plain alveolar lateral click does occur as an interjection, usually written tchick! or tchek! (and often reduplicated tchick-tchick!), used to urge a horse to move.
Language | Word | IPA | Meaning | Notes | |
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ǃKung | [ᵑǁàŋ] – [ʖ̃àŋ] | 'marama bean' | |||
Hadza | [ʔeǁekeke] – [ʔeʖekeke] | 'to listen' | |||
[naǁʰi] – [naʖʰi] | 'to crowd' | ||||
[koᵑǁa] – [koʖ̃a] | 'to be a pair' | ||||
[ɬaᵑǁˀa] – [ɬaʖ̃ˀa] | 'a split, fork' | ||||
Xhosa | isiXhosa | [isiǁʰosa] – [isiʖʰosa] | 'Xhosa language' | Contrasts tenuis, murmured, aspirated, and nasal lateral clicks. | |
!Xóõ | ǁnáã | [ᵑǁɑ́ɑ̃] – [ʖ̃ɑ́ɑ̃] | 'grewia berry' | ||
Zulu | xoxa | [ˈǁɔːǁa] – [ˈʖɔːʖa] | 'to converse' |
Dental lateral click | |
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ǁ̻ | |
ǀǀǀ | |
Encoding | |
Kirshenbaum | t_l! |
In addition to alveolar articulations, dental lateral clicks are reported from speakers of an Angolan ǃXũũ dialect now residing in Mangetti Dune, Namibia. These include at least voiceless, voiced, and nasal phonations, and are reflexes of the retroflex clicks of Proto-Juu. They are provisionally written with three pipes, ⟨ǀǀǀ⟩, rather than the two of the alveolar lateral ⟨ǁ⟩. They are laminal alveolar or denti-alveolar, [ǁ̻], while the clicks transcribed as ⟨ǁ⟩ are apical postalveolar, [ǁ̺].
Contrasting lateral clicks in Mangetti Dune ǃXũũ:
[ᵑǁàŋ] | 'marama bean' |
[ᵑǁ̻àŋ] | 'eland' |
[ᵑǃáŋ] | 'inside' |