Retroflex

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Retroflex
◌̢Category:Pages with plain IPA
◌̣Category:Pages with plain IPA
Subapical retroflex plosive

A retroflex (/ˈrɛtrəflɛks, -r-/ Category:Pages including recorded pronunciations) or cacuminal (/kəˈkjmɪnəl/ Category:Pages including recorded pronunciations) consonant is a coronal consonant where the tongue has a flat, concave, or even curled shape, and is articulated between the alveolar ridge and the hard palate. They are sometimes referred to as cerebral consonants—especially in Indology.

The Latin-derived word retroflex means "bent back"; some retroflex consonants are pronounced with the tongue fully curled back so that articulation involves the underside of the tongue tip (subapical). These sounds are sometimes described as "true" retroflex consonants. However, retroflexes are commonly taken to include other consonants having a similar place of articulation without such extreme curling of the tongue; these may be articulated with the tongue tip (apical) or the tongue blade (laminal). When apical, they have been called apico-domal consonants.

Types

Retroflex consonants, like other coronal consonants, come in several varieties, depending on the shape of the tongue. The tongue may be either flat or concave, or even with the tip curled back. The point of contact on the tongue may be with the tip (apical), with the blade (laminal), or with the underside of the tongue (subapical). The point of contact on the roof of the mouth may be with the alveolar ridge (alveolar), the area behind the alveolar ridge (postalveolar), or the hard palate (palatal). Finally, both sibilant (fricative or affricate) and nonsibilant (stop, nasal, lateral, rhotic) consonants can have a retroflex articulation.

The greatest variety of combinations occurs with sibilants, because for them, small changes in tongue shape and position cause significant changes in the resulting sound. Retroflex sounds generally have a duller, lower-pitched sound than other alveolar or postalveolar consonants, especially the grooved alveolar sibilants. The farther back the point of contact with the roof of the mouth, the more concave is the shape of the tongue, and the duller (lower pitched) is the sound, with subapical consonants being the most extreme.

The main combinations normally observed are:

  • Laminal post-alveolar, with a flat tongue. These occur, for example, in Polish cz, sz, ż (rz), dż.
  • Apical post-alveolar, with a somewhat concave tongue. These occur, for example, in Mandarin zh, ch, sh, r, Hindi and most other Indo-Aryan languages, and most Australian languages.[1][2]
  • Subapical palatal, with a highly concave tongue, which occur particularly in the Dravidian languages and some Indo-Aryan languages. They are the dullest and lowest-pitched type and, after a vowel, often add strong r-coloring to the vowel and sound as if an American English r occurred between the vowel and consonant. They are not a place of articulation, as the IPA chart implies, but a shape of the tongue analogous to laminal and apical.[3]

Subapical sounds are sometimes called "true retroflex" because of the curled-back shape of the tongue, and the other sounds sometimes go by other names. For example, Ladefoged and Maddieson[4] prefer to call the laminal post-alveolar sounds "flat post-alveolar".

Other sounds

Retroflex sounds must be distinguished from other consonants made in the same parts of the mouth:

The first three types of sounds above have a convex tongue shape, which gives them an additional secondary articulation of palatalization. The last type has a groove running down the center line of the tongue, which gives it a strong hissing quality. The retroflex sounds, however, have a flat or concave shape, with no associated palatalization, and no groove running down the tongue. The term "retroflex", in fact, literally means "bent back" (concave), although consonants with a flat tongue shape are commonly considered retroflex as well.

The velar bunched approximant found in northern varieties of Dutch and some varieties of American English is acoustically similar to the retroflex approximant. It is articulated with the body of the tongue bunched up at the velum.

Transcription

IPA transcription

In the International Phonetic Alphabet, the symbols for retroflex consonants are typically the same as for the alveolar consonants, but with the addition of a right-facing hook to the bottom of the symbol.

Retroflex consonants are transcribed in the International Phonetic Alphabet as follows:

IPA Description Example
Language Orthography IPA Meaning
ɳ̊Category:Pages with plain IPA voiceless retroflex nasal Iaai[5] hnrathuCategory:Articles containing Iaai-language text [ɳ̊aθu]Category:Pages with plain IPA 'cold'
ɳCategory:Pages with plain IPA voiced retroflex nasal Punjabi ਗਾਣਾ / گاݨا [ˈgaːɳaˑ]Category:Pages with plain IPA song
Telugu ము [paɳamu]Category:Pages with plain IPA stake; bet
ʈCategory:Pages with plain IPA voiceless retroflex plosive Hindi / Urdu टांग / ٹانگ [ʈaːŋg]Category:Pages with plain IPA leg
Telugu టెక్కెము [ʈekːkemu]Category:Pages with plain IPA banner; pennant
ɖCategory:Pages with plain IPA voiced retroflex plosive Somali Bandhig [banːɖig]Category:Pages with plain IPA presentation
Hindi / Urdu ब्बा / ڈبا [ɖəbːaː]Category:Pages with plain IPA box
Telugu గ్గర [ɖagːgara]Category:Pages with plain IPA phantom; apparition
ʈ͡ʂCategory:Pages with plain IPA voiceless retroflex affricate Torwali ڇوووCategory:Articles containing Torwali-language text [ʈ͡ʂuwu]Category:Pages with plain IPA to sew
ɖ͡ʐCategory:Pages with plain IPA voiced retroflex affricate Yi Category:Articles containing Yi-language text / rryCategory:Articles containing Yi-language text [ɖ͡ʐɪ˧]Category:Pages with plain IPA tooth
ʂCategory:Pages with plain IPA voiceless retroflex fricative Mandarin 上海 (Shànghǎi) [ʂɑ̂ŋ.xàɪ]Category:Pages with plain IPA Shanghai
Sanskrit भाषा [bʱɑ́ːʂɑː]Category:Pages with plain IPA language
Telugu మి [miʂa]Category:Pages with plain IPA pretext
ʐCategory:Pages with plain IPA voiced retroflex fricative Russian жаба ʐabə]Category:Pages with plain IPA toad
Polish żaba ʐaba]Category:Pages with plain IPA frog
ɻ̊˔Category:Pages with plain IPA voiceless retroflex non-sibilant fricative Ormuri[6] Category:All articles needing examplesCategory:Articles needing examples from November 2022[example needed]
ɻ˔Category:Pages with plain IPA voiced retroflex non-sibilant fricative English (Eastern Cape)[7] red [ɻ˔ed]Category:Pages with plain IPA 'red'
ɻCategory:Pages with plain IPA voiced retroflex approximant Tamil தமிழ் [t̪ɐmɨɻ]Category:Pages with plain IPA Tamil
ɭCategory:Pages with plain IPA voiced retroflex lateral approximant Tamil ள் [ɑːɭ]Category:Pages with plain IPA person
Telugu నెవు [neɭawu]Category:Pages with plain IPA familiarity; acquaintance
Swedish Karlstad [ˈkʰɑːɭ.sta]Category:Pages with plain IPA Karlstad
ɽ̊Category:Pages with plain IPA voiceless retroflex flap Dhivehi[a] Category:All articles needing examplesCategory:Articles needing examples from December 2020[example needed]
ɽCategory:Pages with plain IPA voiced retroflex flap Hausa shaara [ʃáːɽa]Category:Pages with plain IPA sweeping
Hindi / Urdu कीचड़ / کیچڑ [kiːt͡ʃəɽ]Category:Pages with plain IPA mud
ɽ͡r̥Category:Pages with plain IPA voiceless retroflex trill Dhivehi[a][8] Category:All articles needing examplesCategory:Articles needing examples from March 2015[example needed]
ɽ͡rCategory:Pages with plain IPA voiced retroflex trill Wintu[9] boloy noṛ-toṛoṛ [boloj noɽr toɽoɽrCategory:Pages with plain IPA] '(ridge on a trail from Hayfork to Hyampom)'
𝼈̊Category:Pages with plain IPA voiceless retroflex lateral flap Wahgi Category:All articles needing examplesCategory:Articles needing examples from December 2020[example needed]
𝼈Category:Pages with plain IPA voiced retroflex lateral flap Pashto ړوند [𝼈und]Category:Pages with plain IPA blind
Marathi बा [ˈbɑː𝼈]Category:Pages with plain IPA baby
Category:Pages with plain IPA voiceless retroflex lateral fricative Toda pü·ł̣ [pʏːꞎ]Category:Pages with plain IPA summer
𝼅Category:Pages with plain IPA voiced retroflex lateral fricative Ao[10] Category:All articles needing examplesCategory:Articles needing examples from December 2020[example needed]
ʈ͡ꞎCategory:Pages with plain IPA voiceless retroflex lateral affricate Bhadarwahi ट्ळा [ʈ͡ꞎaː]Category:Pages with plain IPA three
ɖ͡𝼅Category:Pages with plain IPA voiced retroflex lateral affricate Bhadarwahi हैड्ळ [haiɖ͡𝼅]Category:Pages with plain IPA turmeric
ʈʼCategory:Pages with plain IPA retroflex ejective stop Yokuts ṭʼa∙yʼCategory:Articles containing Yokuts-language text [ʈʼaːjˀ]Category:Pages with plain IPA 'down feather'
ʈ͡ʂʼCategory:Pages with plain IPA retroflex ejective affricate Gwichʼin etrʼuu [ɛʈ͡ʂʼu:]Category:Pages with plain IPA arctic tern
ᶑ̥Category:Pages with plain IPA (𝼉Category:Pages with plain IPA) voiceless retroflex implosive Ngiti Category:All articles needing examplesCategory:Articles needing examples from December 2020[example needed]
Category:Pages with plain IPA voiced retroflex implosive Ngadha modhe [ˈmoᶑe]Category:Pages with plain IPA good
k͡𝼊 q͡𝼊
ɡ͡𝼊 ɢ͡𝼊
ŋ͡𝼊 ɴ͡𝼊
Category:Pages with plain IPA
retroflex clicks Central !Kung ɡ‼ú [ᶢ𝼊ú]Category:Pages with plain IPA water

Other conventions

Some linguists restrict these symbols for consonants with subapical palatal articulation, in which the tongue is curled back and contacts the hard palate, and use the alveolar symbols with the obsolete IPA underdot symbol for an apical post-alveolar articulation: ṭ, ḍ, ṇ, ṣ, ẓ, ḷ, ɾ̣, ɹ̣Category:Pages with plain IPA, and use ᶘ, Category:Pages with plain IPA for laminal retroflex, as in Polish and Russian.[11] The latter are also often transcribed with a retraction diacritic, as Category:Pages with plain IPA. Otherwise they are typically but inaccurately transcribed as if they were palato-alveolar, as ʃCategory:Pages with plain IPA.

Consonants with more forward articulation, in which the tongue touches the alveolar or postalveolar region rather than the hard palate, can be indicated with the retracted diacritic (minus sign below). This occurs especially for [s̠ ẕ]Category:Pages with plain IPA; other sounds indicated this way, such as Category:Pages with plain IPA, tend to refer to alveolo-palatal rather than retroflex consonants.

Occurrence

Although data are not precise, about 20 percent of the world's languages contain retroflex consonants of one sort or another.[12] About half of these possess only retroflex continuants, with most of the rest having both stops and continuants.

Retroflex consonants are concentrated in the Indian subcontinent, particularly in the Indo-Aryan and Dravidian languages, but are found in other languages of the region as well, such as the Munda languages and Burushaski.

The Nuristani languages of eastern Afghanistan also have retroflex consonants. Among Eastern Iranian languages, they are common in Pashto, Wakhi, Sanglechi-Ishkashimi, and Munji-Yidgha. They also occur in some other Asian languages such as Mandarin Chinese, Javanese and Vietnamese.

The other major concentration is in the indigenous languages of Australia and the Western Pacific (notably New Caledonia). Here, most languages have retroflex plosives, nasals and approximants.

Retroflex consonants are relatively rare in the European languages but occur in such languages as Swedish and Norwegian in Northern Europe, some Romance languages of Southern Europe (Sardinian, Sicilian, including Calabrian and Salentino, Venetian, some Italian dialects such as Lunigianese in Italy, and some Asturian dialects in Spain), and (sibilants only) Faroese and several Slavic languages (Polish, Russian, Serbo-Croatian, Slovak and Sorbian). In Swedish and Norwegian, a sequence of r and a coronal consonant may be replaced by the coronal's retroflex equivalent: the name Martin is pronounced [ˈmǎʈːɪn]Category:Pages with Swedish IPA (Swedish) or [ˈmɑ̀ʈːɪn]Category:Pages with Norwegian IPA (Norwegian), and nord ("north") is pronounced [ˈnuːɖ] Category:Pages with Swedish IPACategory:Pages including recorded pronunciations in (Standard) Swedish and [ˈnuːɽ]Category:Pages with Norwegian IPA in many varieties of Norwegian. That is sometimes done for several consonants in a row after an r: Hornstull is pronounced [huːɳʂˈʈɵlː]Category:Pages with Swedish IPA).

The retroflex approximant [ɻ]Category:Pages with plain IPA is in free variation with the postalveolar approximant /ɹ/Category:Pages with plain IPA in many dialects of American English, particularly in the Midwestern United States. Polish and Russian possess retroflex sibilants, but no stops or liquids at this place of articulation.

Retroflex consonants are largely absent from indigenous languages of the Americas with the exception of the extreme south of South America, an area in the Southwestern United States as in Hopi and O'odham, and in Alaska and the Yukon Territory as in the Athabaskan languages Gwich’in and Hän. In African languages retroflex consonants are also rare but reportedly occur in a few Nilo-Saharan languages, as well as in the Bantu language Makhuwa and some other varieties. In southwest Ethiopia, phonemically distinctive retroflex consonants are found in Bench and Sheko, two contiguous, but not closely related, Omotic languages.[13]

There are several retroflex consonants that are implied by the International Phonetic Association. In their Handbook, they give the example of [ᶑ]Category:Pages with plain IPA, a retroflex implosive, but when they requested an expansion of coverage of the International Phonetic Alphabet by Unicode in 2020, they supported the addition superscript variants of not just [ᶑ]Category:Pages with plain IPA but of the retroflex lateral fricatives [ꞎ]Category:Pages with plain IPA and [𝼅]Category:Pages with plain IPA, of the retroflex lateral flap [𝼈]Category:Pages with plain IPA, and of the retroflex click release [𝼊]Category:Pages with plain IPA. (See Latin Extended-F.) The lateral fricatives are explicitly provided for by extIPA.

Most of these sounds are not common, but they all occur. For example, the Iwaidja language of northern Australia has a retroflex lateral flap [𝼈]Category:Pages with plain IPA ([ɺ̢]Category:Pages with plain IPA) as well as a retroflex tap [ɽ]Category:Pages with plain IPA and retroflex lateral approximant [ɭ]Category:Pages with plain IPA; and the Dravidian language Toda has a subapical retroflex lateral fricative [ꞎ]Category:Pages with plain IPA ([ɭ̊˔]Category:Pages with plain IPA) and a retroflexed trill [ɽr]Category:Pages with plain IPA. The Ngad'a language of Flores has been reported to have a retroflex implosive [ᶑ]Category:Pages with plain IPA. Subapical retroflex clicks occur in Central !Kung,[14] and possibly in Damin.Category:All articles with unsourced statementsCategory:Articles with unsourced statements from January 2010[citation needed]

Most languages with retroflex sounds typically have only one retroflex sound with a given manner of articulationCategory:All articles with unsourced statementsCategory:Articles with unsourced statements from January 2021[citation needed]. An exception, however, is the Toda language, with a two-way distinction among retroflex sibilants between apical (post)alveolar and subapical palatal.

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 Some dialects, maybe a fricative, flap or a trill.

References

  1. Lee, Wai-Sum (1999). An Articulatory and Acoustical Analysis of the Syllable-Initial Sibilants and Approximant in Beijing Mandarin. ICPhS-14. pp. 413–416. S2CID 51828449.
  2. 东方语言学: 第十五辑 (in Chinese). 上海教育出版社. 2015. pp. 1–16. ISBN 978-7-5444-6780-3. Retrieved 2023-07-24.Category:CS1 Chinese-language sources (zh)
  3. Hardcastle, William J.; Laver, John; Gibbon, Fiona E. (2010-02-22). "Phonetic Notation". The Handbook of Phonetic Sciences. John Wiley & Sons. p. 693. ISBN 978-1-4051-4590-9. LCCN 2009033872. OCLC 430736646. OL 24461752M.
  4. Ladefoged, Peter; Maddieson, Ian (1996). The Sounds of the World's Languages. Oxford: Blackwell. ISBN 0-631-19815-6.
  5. UCLA Working Papers in Phonetics, vol. 53–55, p. 212.
  6. Novák, Ľubomír (2013). "Other Eastern Iranian Languages". Problem of Archaism and Innovation in the Eastern Iranian Languages (PhD). Prague: Charles University. p. 59.
  7. Ladefoged & Maddieson (1996:165)
  8. Maumoon, Yumna (2002), A General Overview of the Dhivehi Language (PDF), Male: National Centre for Linguistic and Historical Research, p. 35, ISBN 99915-1-032-X
  9. Pitkin, Harvey (1984). Wintu grammar. University of California publications in linguistics (Vol. 94). Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 34. ISBN 0-520-09612-6.
  10. Gurubasave Gowda, K.S. (1972). Ao-Naga Phonetic Reader (Thesis). Mysore: Central Institute of Indian Languages.
  11. Laver, John (1994). Principles of Phonetics. ISBN 0-521-45031-4. OL 22577661M.
  12. Ian Maddieson (with a chapter contributed by Sandra Ferrari Disner); Patterns of sounds; Cambridge University Press, 1984. ISBN 0-521-26536-3
  13. Breeze, Mary (1988). Bechhaus-Gerst, Marianne; Serzisko, Fritz (eds.). "Phonological features of Gimira and Dizi". Cushitic - Omotic: papers from the International Symposium on Cushitic and Omotic languages, Cologne, January 6–9, 1986. Hamburg: Helmut Buske Verlag: 473–487. ISBN 9783871188909. OL 8987799M.
  14. Scott, Abigail; Miller, Amanda; Namaseb, Levi; Sands, Bonny; Shah, Sheena (June 2, 2010). "Retroflex Clicks in Two Dialects of ǃXung". University of Botswana, Department of African Languages.
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