Pharyngealisation



         


Pharyngealisation is a secondary feature of phonemes in a language. It refers to a constriction of the pharynx produced at the same time as a phoneme is produced.

Not every language utilises pharyngealisation; English, for instance, neglects it from a phonemic point of view. However, in Russian, the letter l can represent two phonemes, one traditionally called palatalised, the other called plain. The "plain" l in Russian is realised as l with pharyngealisation.

Ubykh, another language of Russia, also uses pharyngealisation, possessing 14 pharyngealised consonants.





  View Live Article   This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License