Uvular trill

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Template:Infobox IPA

The uvular trill is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is Template:IPA, a small capital R. The equivalent X-SAMPA symbol is R\. This consonant is one of several collectively called guttural R.

Features

Features of the uvular trill:

Where found

The uvular trill is rare outside Europe, where it occurs in some varieties of Abkhaz and in Ashkenazic Hebrew.

Within Europe it seems to have originated in French, from where it spread to modern Standard German, most German dialects, some Dutch dialects, some northern Italian dialects, and the southern dialects of Swedish. In part of this area it has since acquired a uvular fricative allophone, which has taken over completely in Standard Dutch and Danish. It also occurs among speakers of other languages, when individuals have speech impediments that make pronouncing the preferred alveolar trill difficult or impossible (although this is often corrected with minor surgery). Lenin is probably the most famous Russian to use uvular trills.

Few languages contrast more than one trill. However, older speakers of eastern dialects of Occitan contrast uvular and alveolar trills, as for example in Template:IPA cured and Template:IPA oak.

See also

Template:Consonantsde:Stimmhafter uvularer Vibrant fr:Consonne roulée uvulaire voisée sv:Uvular tremulant