The 'voiceless dental non-sibilant fricative' is a type of
consonantal sound used in some
spoken languages. The symbol in the
International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is , and the equivalent
X-SAMPA symbol is
T. The IPA symbol is the
Greek letter
theta, which is used for this sound in
Greek, and the sound is thus often referred to as "theta". It is familiar to English speakers as the 'th' in ''thing''.
The dental fricatives are often called "interdental" because they are often produced with the tongue between the upper and lower
teeth, and not just against the back of the teeth, as they are with other
dental consonants.
Many languages, including widely-spoken ones such as
German,
Portuguese,
Spanish in the Americas,
Japanese, and
Mandarin Chinese, as well as all
Slavic languages and some dialects of English, lack this sound. Speakers of such languages and dialects sometimes have difficulty producing or distinguishing it from similar sounds, and typically replace it with a
voiceless alveolar fricative,
voiceless dental plosive, or a
voiceless labiodental fricative.
Features
Features of the voiceless dental fricative:
★ Its
manner of articulation is
fricative, which means it is produced by constricting air flow through a narrow channel at the place of articulation, causing
turbulence.
★ Its
place of articulation is
dental which means it is articulated with the tongue on either the lower or the upper
teeth, or both.
★ Its
phonation type is voiceless, which means it is produced without vibrations of the vocal cords.
★ It is an
oral consonant, which means air is allowed to escape through the mouth.
★ It is a
central consonant, which means it is produced by allowing the airstream to flow over the middle of the tongue, rather than the sides.
★ The
airstream mechanism is
pulmonic egressive, which means it is articulated by pushing air out of the
lungs and through the vocal tract, rather than from the
glottis or the mouth.
Occurrence
★
Indo-European
★
★
Albanian: '''th'otë'' , "to say"
★
★
Cornish: ''e'th''' , "eight"
★
★
English: '''th'in''
★
★
Galician: '''c'ero'' , "zero"
★
★
Greek: 'θ'άλασσα , "sea"
★
★
Icelandic: '''þ'ú'' , "you (singular)"
★
★
Nuorese Sardinian: ''pè'c'ia'' , "meat"
★
★
Romagnol: ''fa'z'a'' , "face"
★
★
Castilian Spanish: ''ca'z'ar'' , "to hunt"
★
★
Welsh: ''sai'th''' , "seven"
★
Afroasiatic
★
★
Arabic: ثابت '''ṯ'ābit'' , "firm"
★
★
Kabyle: ''fa'ṯ''' , "to cut"
★
★
Masa: ''fa'ṯ''' , "five"
★
★
Harsusi: '''ṯ'ərō'' , "two"
★
★
Welayta: , "flower"
★
★
Western Neo-Aramaic: '''ṯ'lō'ṯ'a'' , "three"
★
Nilo-Saharan
★
★
Berta: , "to eat"
★
★
Kwama: , "to laugh"
★
Niger-Congo
★
★
Asu: , "eye"
★
★
Gweno: , "eye"
★
★
Swahili: '''th'amini'' , "value"
★
Dravidian
★
★
Toda: ''wïnbo'th''' , "nine"
★
Turkic
★
★
Turkmen: '''s'ekiz'' , "eight"
★
Japonic
★
★
Amami: '''th'eda'' , "sun"
★
Sino-Tibetan
★
★
Burmese: '''s'uṃ'' , "three"
★
★
S'gaw Karen: '''th'ö
33'' , "three"
★
Tai-Kadai
★
★
Basadung Hlai: '''th'sio'' , "one"
★
Austronesian
★
★
Lorediakarkar: '''th'ar'' , "four"
★
★
Budai Rukai: ''i'th'a'' , "one"
★
★
Shark Bay: '''th'ar'' , "four"
★
Na-Dene
★
★
Gwich'in: '''th'ał'' , "pants"
★
★
Hän: ''nih'th'än'' , "I want"
★
★
Northern Tutchone: '''th'o'' , "pants"
★
★
Southern Tutchone: '''th'ü'' , "pants"
★
★
Tanacross: '''th'iit'' , "embers"
★
Salishan
★
★
Saanich , "eight"
★
★
Sliammon Comox , "five"
★
Algonquian
★
★
Arapaho: ''yoo'3'on'' , "five"
★
★
Gros Ventre: ''nii'th''' , "two"
★
★
Kickapoo (United States): ''ne'th'wi'' , "three"
★
★
Shawnee: ''n'th'wi'' , "three"
★
Siouan
★
★
Stoney: , "four"
★
Karuk
★
★
Karuk ''yí'th'a'' , "one"
★
Yuman
★
★
Havasupai: '''th'eráp'' , "five"
★
★
Hualapai: '''th'aráp'' , "five"
★
★
Yavapai: '''th'erápi'' , "five"
See also
★
List of phonetics topics