Labial consonants are consonants in which one or both
lips are the
active articulator. The two common labial articulations are
bilabials, articulated using both lips, and
labiodentals, articulated with the lower lip against the upper teeth, both of which are present in
English. A third labial articulation is
dentolabials, articulated with the upper lip against the lower teeth (the reverse of labiodental), normally only found in pathological speech. Generally precluded are
linguolabials, in which the tip of the
tongue contacts the posterior side of the upper lip, making them
coronals, though sometimes, they behave as labial consonants.
The most common distribution between bilabials and labiodentals is the
English one, in which the
nasal and the
stops, , , and , are bilabial and the
fricatives, , and , are labiodental. The
voiceless bilabial fricative,
voiced bilabial fricative, and the
bilabial approximant do not exist as the primary realizations of any sounds in
English, but they occur in many languages. For example, the
Spanish consonant written ''b'' or ''v'' is pronounced, between vowels, as a
voiced bilabial approximant.
Lip rounding, or
labialization, is a common
approximant-like
co-articulatory feature. English is a
voiced labialized velar approximant, which is far more common than the purely
labial approximant �̞ In the
languages of the Caucasus, labialized
dorsals like /kÊ·/ and /qÊ·/ are very common.
Very few languages, however, make a distinction purely between
bilabials and
labiodentals, making "labial" usually a sufficient specification of a language's
phoneme
A phoneme () is any set of similar Phone (phonetics), speech sounds that are perceptually regarded by the speakers of a language as a single basic sound—a smallest possible Phonetics, phonetic unit—that helps distinguish one word fr ...
s. One exception is
Ewe, which has both kinds of fricatives, but the labiodentals are produced with greater articulatory force.
Lack of labials
While most languages make use of purely labial phonemes, a few generally lack them. Examples are
Tlingit,
Eyak (both
Na-Dené),
Wichita (
Caddoan), and the
Iroquoian languages except
Cherokee.
Many of these languages are transcribed with and with
labialized consonants. However, it is not always clear to what extent the lips are involved in such sounds. In the Iroquoian languages, for example, involved little apparent rounding of the lips. See the
Tillamook language for an example of a language with "rounded" consonants and vowels that do not have any actual labialization. All of these languages have seen labials introduced under the influence of English.
See also
*
Labialization
*
Index of phonetics articles
References
*
* McDorman, Richard E. (1999). ''Labial Instability in Sound Change: Explanations for the Loss of /p/''. Chicago: Organizational Knowledge Press. .
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Place of articulation
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