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Apical consonant
Apical consonant
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Apical
◌̺
◌᫣
IPA number409
Encoding
Entity (decimal)̺
Unicode (hex)U+033A
Schematic linguograms of 1) apical, 2) upper apical, 3) laminal and 4) apicolaminal stops based on Dart (1991:16), illustrating the areas of the tongue in contact with the palate during articulation (shown in grey)

An apical consonant is a phone (speech sound) produced by obstructing the air passage with the tip of the tongue (apex) in conjunction with upper articulators from lips to postalveolar, and possibly prepalatal.[1][2] It contrasts with laminal consonants, which are produced by creating an obstruction with the blade of the tongue, just behind the tip. Sometimes apical is used exclusively for an articulation that involves only the tip of the tongue and apicolaminal for an articulation that involves both the tip and the blade of the tongue.[3] However, the distinction is not always made and the latter one may be called simply apical, especially when describing an apical dental articulation.[1][4] As there is some laminal contact in the alveolar region, the apicolaminal dental consonants are also labelled as denti-alveolar.

It is not a very common distinction and is typically applied only to fricatives and affricates. Thus, many varieties of English have either apical or laminal pairs of [t]/[d] (although the plosives [t]/[d], nasals [n] and lateral [l~ɫ] tend to be apical, while the fricatives [s]/[z] tend to be laminal[5]). However, some varieties of Arabic, including Hadhrami Arabic in Yemen, realize [t] as laminal but [d] as apical.

Basque uses the distinction for alveolar fricatives. Mandarin Chinese uses it for postalveolar fricatives (the "alveolo-palatal" and "retroflex" series). Lillooet uses it as a secondary feature in contrasting velarized and non-velarized affricates. A distinction between apical and laminal is common in Australian Aboriginal languages for nasals, plosives and (usually) lateral approximants.

Most dialects in the Bengali–Assamese continuum distinguish between dental–laminal alveolar stops and apical alveolar stops. In Upper Assamese, they have merged and leave only the apical alveolar stops. In Western Bengali apical alveolars are replaced by apical post-alveolars.

In the International Phonetic Alphabet, the diacritic for apical consonants is a rotated dental diacritic, U+033A ◌̺ COMBINING INVERTED BRIDGE BELOW.

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References

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from Grokipedia
An is a articulated with the apex (tip) of the raised to make contact with the teeth or the alveolar ridge. This type of articulation contrasts with laminal consonants, which involve the blade (lamina) of the tongue rather than its tip. In the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA), apical consonants are typically transcribed using the standard symbols for alveolar or dental sounds, with the diacritic ◌̺ (a combining inverted bridge below) added to indicate the apical quality when distinction is necessary. The apical-laminal distinction is phonemically relevant in certain languages, particularly many Australian Aboriginal languages such as Arrernte and Warlpiri, where it creates contrasts among coronal stops, nasals, and laterals at dental, alveolar, and postalveolar places of articulation. In other languages like English, alveolar consonants such as /t/, /d/, /s/, and /z/ are generally produced with an apical articulation, though this may vary by dialect and phonetic context. Apical consonants can include stops, fricatives, affricates, nasals, and , and their acoustic properties often feature a more forward spectral peak compared to laminal counterparts due to the tip's positioning. This articulatory difference influences phonological patterns, such as assimilation or neutralization in specific environments, and is a key parameter in the typology of coronal sounds across languages.

Fundamentals

Definition

Apical consonants are speech sounds produced when the apex, or tip, of the serves as the primary active to obstruct or approximate the in the upper vocal tract, typically against the teeth, alveolar ridge, or other roof structures. This precise involvement of the tongue tip distinguishes apical articulation from other coronal types, where the front of the tongue engages but not exclusively the apex. As a of coronal consonants—those involving the , tip, or subapical region of the —apical consonants emphasize the role of the apex in creating the , contrasting with laminal consonants that primarily use the tongue just behind the tip. This distinction affects phonetic realization, such as in the quality of fricatives or stops, depending on the exact tongue positioning. In phonetic classification, apical consonants commonly include alveolar stops like and , where the tip contacts the alveolar ridge to block momentarily.

Articulation

Apical consonants are produced through the elevation of the 's apex—the very tip—to contact or closely approximate the upper teeth, alveolar ridge, or postalveolar , thereby obstructing the pulmonic passing through the oral cavity. This mechanism relies on the apex's high degree of mobility and precision, enabling it to form the primary constriction while the rest of the adjusts secondarily. The anatomical specifics of this articulation emphasize the apex's role in achieving targeted contact points, with the extent of obstruction determined by the . In stops, the tongue tip creates a complete seal against the upper , momentarily blocking all and building for release; in contrast, fricatives involve a partial contact that forms a narrow channel, allowing air to escape with turbulent noise due to . This variability in closure degrees—full for plosives versus channeled for —highlights the apex's adaptability in shaping the vocal tract's . Articulatory variations often incorporate tongue bunching, where the body of the tongue retracts or elevates to modify cavity resonance, or retroflexion, in which the apex curls backward toward the while maintaining its role as the chief . These adjustments, observed across languages, enhance the distinct acoustic profiles without shifting the primary responsibility to other regions.

Phonetic Features

Place of

Apical consonants are articulated using the tip (apex) of the as the primary active , making contact with various passive articulators in the upper vocal tract to define their . This precise positioning enables classifications such as dental, alveolar, postalveolar, and retroflex, each characterized by distinct tongue tip configurations. In dental articulation, the tongue tip contacts the upper front teeth, creating a forward placement that contrasts with more posterior coronal sounds. Alveolar apical consonants involve the tongue tip raising to meet the alveolar ridge, the bony prominence just behind the upper teeth, allowing for a centralized coronal contact. Postalveolar apicals position the tongue tip slightly behind the alveolar ridge, often with minimal retraction, facilitating a transitional zone between alveolar and palatal regions. Retroflex apical consonants are produced by curling the tongue tip backward toward the post-alveolar or palatal area, sometimes involving subapical underside contact for enhanced posteriority. This curling creates a sublingual cavity and distinguishes retroflexes acoustically through lowered higher formants. An example of an apical-specific retroflex place occurs in , such as the apical post-alveolar [s̺] in Toda. The tip's pointed shape in apical articulation permits finer spatial distinctions among these places compared to laminal consonants, which use the broader blade of the and result in more distributed contact areas. For instance, apical production supports contrasts like dental versus alveolar in languages with multiple coronal places, as the tip enables targeted, point-like obstructions.

Manner of Articulation

Apical consonants exhibit a range of manners of articulation, determined by how the tongue tip obstructs or modifies airflow in the vocal tract. The primary manners compatible with apical production include stops, fricatives, affricates, nasals, and laterals, often realized at alveolar places of articulation such as the alveolar ridge. Stops involve complete closure by the tongue tip against the upper articulator, temporarily blocking pulmonic airflow before an abrupt release, as in the voiceless alveolar stop found in English and many other languages. Fricatives feature a narrow constriction formed by the tongue tip, generating turbulent airflow due to high velocity, exemplified by the voiceless alveolar fricative ; the agility and precision of the tongue tip particularly favor this manner for alveolar fricatives, enabling fine control over the stricture. Affricates combine a stop closure with a fricative release, such as in apical [ts] sequences observed in certain dialects. Nasals achieve oral closure with the tongue tip while lowering the velum to divert airflow through the nasal cavity, as in the alveolar nasal . Laterals permit lateral airflow around a central closure made by the tongue tip, commonly producing sounds like the alveolar lateral approximant in English, which is frequently apical and velarized with a lowered jaw position. In specific languages, these manners demonstrate apical compatibility; for instance, in Arrernte, apical (retroflex) consonants occur as stops [ʈ], nasals [ɳ], and laterals [ɭ], with stops providing the clearest acoustic cues for distinction from non-apical counterparts. Similarly, in Hill Mari, apical fricatives like [ʃ] and [ʒ] are articulated with the tongue tip against the alveolar ridge. Constraints arise from the tongue tip's pointed geometry, which excels in precise closures and narrow strictures but is less suited to the broader approximations needed for non-lateral , making purely apical rare outside of rhotic contexts. Secondary features such as aspiration—characterized by a puff of voiceless following release—or ejection, involving glottalic pressure for implosive-like release, are possible with apical stops; examples include aspirated [tʰ] in English and ejective [tʼ] in Quechua.

Examples in Languages

Indo-European Languages

In standard varieties of , the alveolar stops and , nasal , lateral , and fricatives and are typically produced as apical consonants, involving contact between the and the alveolar ridge. This tip-alveolar articulation is a common feature across these phonemes, contributing to their precise realization in intervocalic and word-initial positions, though individual speaker variation can introduce slight laminal influences in fricatives like and . In such as Hindi-Urdu, apical consonants are prominently featured in the retroflex series, where stops like [ʈ] and [ɖ] are articulated with the tip curled upward to contact the or postalveolar region. These apical retroflex sounds are contrastive and frequent in the language's , distinguishing them from non-retroflex alveolars. Australian English exhibits variations in apical consonant articulation, particularly for alveolar stops and , where some speakers, especially in broad dialects, produce apical-dental contacts rather than strict tip-alveolar ones, influenced by regional phonetic shifts. This apical-dental realization is more prevalent before low vowels or in casual speech, enhancing perceptual distinctiveness from dental fricatives like [θ] and [ð]. In such as Italian, alveolar stops have undergone a historical shift toward apical articulation from the more laminal forms in Latin, with modern realizations of and involving the tip against the alveolar ridge for clearer release in geminate contexts. This evolution is evident in phonetic studies of Italian varieties.

Non-Indo-European Languages

In such as Arrernte, a Central Desert language, apical consonants form part of a rich coronal inventory that contrasts with laminal ones across stops, nasals, and laterals. Specifically, Arrernte distinguishes apical alveolar stops and nasals (e.g., /t̪ n̪/ as laminal dental vs. /t n/ as apical alveolar) from laminal alveopalatal counterparts, creating oppositions like at̪e 'I' (laminal) versus ate 'back' (apical). This apical-laminal distinction is a hallmark of many Pama-Nyungan languages, where the apical series involves tongue-tip articulation at the alveolar ridge, enabling phonemic contrasts not found in most Indo-European systems. Dravidian languages like Tamil exhibit a prominent series of apical retroflex consonants, articulated with the tongue tip curled back toward the hard palate. This includes the voiceless retroflex stop /ʈ/, nasal /ɳ/, and lateral /ɭ/, as in minimal pairs such as kaɳ 'eye' (retroflex nasal) versus kan 'neck' (alveolar nasal). These sounds, inherited from Proto-Dravidian, are apical in their primary articulation, distinguishing them from non-retroflex coronals and contributing to the language's typological profile in South Asia. The Dravidian language Toda, spoken in southern India, features distinctive apical consonants including a voiceless retroflex lateral fricative /ɭ̥˔/, produced with the tongue tip raised to the postalveolar region while allowing lateral airflow. Additionally, Toda includes a flapped retroflex approximant /ɽ/, a brief apical flap of the tongue tip against the palate. These sounds highlight Toda's extreme phonological diversity within Dravidian, with the apical lateral being particularly rare globally. In such as Nuosu Yi (Northern Yi), apical appear in the alveolar series, with the tongue tip contacting the alveolar ridge for fricatives /s/ and /z/, as well as affricates /ts, tsʰ, dz/. For example, /su³³/ 'three' contrasts with non-sibilants, and these apicals pair with apical vowels like [ɿ] in syllables such as /sɿ³³/ 'mushroom'. This apical articulation for is characteristic of Yi , differing from laminal realizations in neighboring languages. Acoustically, apical fricatives often exhibit higher-frequency noise components compared to laminal ones due to the tongue tip's positioning, which creates a narrower and more anterior constriction, raising the spectral center of gravity (e.g., above 4-5 kHz for apicals in coronal series). This property arises from the smaller front cavity volume in apical gestures, as observed in languages with coronal contrasts.

Phonological Aspects

Contrast with Laminal Consonants

Apical consonants, articulated primarily with the tip, stand in phonological opposition to laminal consonants, which use the of the , creating distinct places of articulation within the coronal region. This opposition allows languages to maintain phonemic contrasts that can alter word meaning, particularly in systems with multiple coronal places. In such languages, the choice between apical and laminal articulations serves to maximize perceptual distinctiveness, often reinforced by coarticulatory effects from adjacent vowels. Languages like Arrernte exemplify this contrast through phonemic pairs such as the laminal dental stop [t̪] and the apical alveolar stop , where intervocalic realizations distinguish meanings in minimal pairs, for instance, in nasal contrasts like lan̪a ('there-mid') versus mana ('money'). Similarly, Warlpiri maintains apical-laminal oppositions in its coronal inventory, though with a single laminal series contrasting against apical alveolars and post-alveolars, enabling distinctions in stops and nasals that are crucial for lexical identity. These contrasts are especially prominent in , where they form part of a four-way coronal system. Perceptually, apical consonants typically produce sharper spectral peaks in their acoustic profiles, particularly in the mid-frequency range, compared to the more monotonically decreasing spectra of laminals, aiding in them within minimal pairs. This acoustic difference enhances the role of these oppositions in meaning distinction, as transitions provide additional cues for identification, with apicals often showing shorter durations and less robust perceptual salience in isolation. Typologically, phonemic apical-laminal contrasts are rare in , which generally feature a single laminal alveolar or dental series without such oppositions, but they are phonemic in 67 languages (14.8%) of the world's languages according to the UPSID database, predominantly in Australian and select Dravidian systems. This distribution underscores why these distinctions are more common in languages requiring fine-grained coronal contrasts for phonological inventory expansion.

Apicolaminal Consonants

Apicolaminal consonants are produced through simultaneous contact involving both the apex () of the and the (), creating a hybrid articulation that extends the contact area across the front of the tongue. This blended mechanism differs from pure apical articulations, which rely solely on the tip, and pure laminal ones, which use only the blade, effectively bridging the two categories. In broad , such consonants are commonly classified as denti-alveolar due to the overlapping nature of the contact, which often spans from the teeth to the . The term "apicolaminal" is not widely used in phonetic and typically describes allophonic variants rather than distinct phonemes. Examples of apicolaminal consonants appear in various languages, where the hybrid articulation arises due to speaker variability or dialectal features. In some dialects of English, the alveolar stops and exhibit apico-laminal contact, with both the tongue tip and blade contributing to the closure against the alveolar ridge. Similarly, emphatic stops in , such as [tˤ] and [dˤ], often involve a more apical orientation compared to their plain counterparts but can feature extended laminal involvement in the primary coronal closure, alongside secondary . Phonologically, apicolaminal consonants are frequently allophonic or non-contrastive, serving as variants within broader alveolar or dental categories without distinguishing meaning. In certain of , such as those in the Trans-New Guinea phylum, coronal systems feature multiple places of articulation, but hybrid apicolaminal realizations are typically allophonic. Historically, these hybrids may evolve from pure apical articulations through gradual expansion of tongue contact, as seen in reconstructions of proto-systems in southern New Guinea languages.

Representation and Notation

IPA Diacritics

In the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA), basic symbols for alveolar consonants, such as , , , , , and , are commonly used in broad transcription and often imply an apical articulation by default in languages where this is the prevalent realization, for instance, the English voiceless alveolar stop . Retroflex consonants, represented by dedicated symbols like [ʈ], [ɖ], [ʂ], and [ɭ], explicitly denote apical articulations, as they involve the tongue tip curling backward toward the . For greater precision in distinguishing tongue tip involvement, the IPA employs the right subscript hook diacritic [◌̺] (Unicode U+033A) to mark apical consonants, as in [t̺] for an apical alveolar plosive; this contrasts with the left subscript hook [◌̻] (U+033B) for laminal (blade-of-tongue) articulations, such as [t̻]. The IPA Handbook recommends these diacritics primarily for narrow transcription, where fine phonetic details like apical versus laminal contrasts are relevant, such as in languages with phonemic distinctions between the two (e.g., apical [t̺] versus laminal [t̻] in certain Australian languages). In broad phonemic transcriptions, the diacritics are omitted unless the distinction affects meaning.

Historical Phonetic Descriptions

In the , phonetic descriptions of consonants articulated with the tip emphasized anatomical positioning, with terms like "cacuminal" commonly applied to retroflex apicals involving the tongue raised against the posterior alveolar ridge. Henry Sweet, in his Handbook of Phonetics (1877), illustrated these articulations through detailed tongue diagrams, focusing on the "point" of the tongue for apical sounds while distinguishing them from broader blade contacts, though without modern precision in terminology. Similarly, , in The Articulations of Speech Sounds (), adopted "cacuminal" for retroflex apicals, equating it with inverted or cerebral sounds as described by earlier scholars like , and used alphabetic symbols to represent the curled tongue tip. The term "apical" for consonants produced primarily with the tongue apex gained prominence in the mid-20th century, notably through Kenneth Pike's work in the 1940s, which shifted emphasis toward systematic articulatory classification in descriptive . Pike's : A Technique for Reducing Languages to Writing (1943) formalized "apical" to denote tip-involved articulations, contrasting them with other coronal types and influencing subsequent phonological analyses. This evolution reflected a broader transition in descriptive from 19th-century anatomical sketches—such as Sweet's diagrams of —to 20th-century articulatory precision, incorporating instrumental methods and standardized notation for cross-linguistic comparisons. Daniel Jones's (1917) played a key role in applying these concepts to English as a , highlighting distinctions between apical (tip) and laminal (blade) articulations in for sounds like /t/ and /d/, aiding ESL learners in avoiding substitutions common in non-native varieties. In ancient grammars, retroflex apicals received rare but foundational mentions as mūrdhanya (cerebral) consonants, described by (c. 5th century BCE) as involving the tongue tip curled toward the , with processes like nati harmony spreading retroflexion, influencing later Indo-Aryan .

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