Voiced palato-alveolar sibilant

Voiced palato-alveolar sibilant
ʒ
IPA number 135
Encoding
Entity (decimal) ʒ
Unicode (hex) U+0292
X-SAMPA Z
Kirshenbaum Z

 

The voiced palato-alveolar fricative or voiced domed postalveolar fricative is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is ⟨ʒ⟩, and the equivalent X-SAMPA symbol is Z. An alternative symbol used in some older and American linguistic literature is ⟨ž⟩, a z with a háček. The sound occurs in many languages and, as in English and French, may have simultaneous lip rounding ([ʒʷ]), although this is rarely indicated in transcription.

Contents

Features

Features of the voiced palato-alveolar fricative:

Occurrence

Language Word IPA Meaning Notes
Albanian zhurmë [ʒuɾmə] 'noise'
Angas zhaam [ʒaːm] 'chin'
Arabic Maghrebi[1] زوج [ʒuʒ] 'two' See Arabic phonology
Armenian ժամ 'hour'
Avar жакъа [ˈʒaqʼːa] 'today'
Azerbaijani jmürdə [pæʒmyrˈdæ] 'sad'
Berber Kabyle jeddi [ʒəddi] 'my grandfather'
Berta [ŋɔ̀nʒɔ̀ʔ] 'honey'
Bulgarian мъжът [mɐˈʒɤt] 'the man'
Chechen ?/ƶiy [ʒiː] 'sheep'
Corsican ghjesgia [ˈjeːʒa] 'church' Also in Gallurese
Czech muži [muʒɪ] 'men' See Czech phonology
Dutch garage [ɣaraʒə] 'garage' See Dutch phonology
English vision [ˈvɪʒən] 'vision' See English phonology
Esperanto manĝaĵo [maɳd͡ʒaʒo] 'food' See Esperanto phonology
French[2] jour [ʒuʁ] 'day' See French phonology
German Garage [ɡaˈʁaːʒə] 'garage' See German phonology
Georgian[3] ურნალი [ʒuɾnali] 'magazine'
Goemai zhiem [ʒiem] 'sickle'
Gwich’in zhòh [ʒôh] 'wolf'
Hän zhùr [ʒûr] 'wolf'
Hebrew ז'קט [ʒaket] 'jacket ' See Modern Hebrew phonology
Hindi झ़दहा [əʒd̪ahaː] 'dragon' See Hindi–Urdu phonology
Hungarian zsa [r̪oːʒɒ] 'rose' See Hungarian phonology
Ingush жий/žii [ʒiː] 'sheep'
Italian Tuscan dialect pigiare [piʒare] 'press' See Italian phonology
Juǀʼhoan [ʒu] 'person'
Kabardian жыг [ʒɪɣʲ] 'tree'
Kazakh жеті [ʒeti] 'seven'
Ladino mujer [muʒɛʀ] 'woman'
Latvian žāvēt [ʒaːveːt] 'smoke' See Latvian phonology
Lithuanian žmona [ʒmoːna] 'wife'
Livonian ž [kuːʒ] 'six'
Macedonian жaбa [ʒaba] 'toad' See Macedonian phonology
Megrelian ირი [ʒiɾi] 'two'
Navajo łizh [ɬiʒ] 'urine'
Ngwe Mmockngie dialect [ʒíá] 'to split'
Occitan Southern Auvergnat argent [aʀʒẽ] 'money'
Gascon [arʒen]
Pashto ژوول [ʒowul] 'chew'
Persian مژه [moʒe] 'eyelash' See Persian phonology
Portuguese[4] jogo [ˈʒoɡu] 'game' See Portuguese phonology
Romanian jar [ʒar] 'embers' See Romanian phonology
Serbo-Croatian жут/žut [ʒut] 'yellow' See Serbo-Croatian phonology
Sioux Lakota waŋži [wãˈʒi] 'one'
Slovenian žito [ʒito] 'cereal'
Spanish Some South American dialects[5] yo [ʒo̞] 'I' See Spanish phonology and yeismo
Dawsahak [ˈʒɐwɐb] 'to answer'
Tagish [ʒé] 'what'
Turkish jale [ʒäːlɛ] 'dew' See Turkish phonology
Turkmen žiraf [ʒiraf] 'giraffe'
Tutchone Northern zhi [ʒi] 'what'
Southern zhǜr [ʒɨ̂r] 'berry'
Ukrainian жaбa [ʒaba] 'frog' See Ukrainian phonology
Urdu اژدہا [əʒd̪ahaː] 'dragon' See Hindi–Urdu phonology
Veps ž [viːʒ] 'five'
Welayta [aʒa] 'bush'
West Frisian bagaazje [bɑgaʒǝ] 'luggage'
Yiddish אָראַנזש [ɔʀanʒ] 'orange' See Yiddish phonology
Zapotec Tilquiapan[6] llan [ʒaŋ] 'anger'

The sound in Russian denoted by <ж> is commonly transcribed as a palato-alveolar fricative but is actually a laminal retroflex fricative.

See also

References

Bibliography