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 Dorsal consonant - Definition 


Places of articulation
Labial consonant
Bilabial consonant
Labiodental consonant
Linguolabial consonant
Coronal consonant
Interdental consonant
Dental consonant
Retroflex consonant
Alveolar consonant
Postalveolar consonant
Alveolo-palatal consonant
Dorsal consonant
Palatal consonant
Labial-palatal consonant 
Velar consonant
Labial-velar consonant
Uvular consonant
Pharyngeal consonant
Epiglottal consonant
Glottal consonant
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Dorsal consonants are articulated with the back of the tongue against either the hard palate, or the flexible velum just behind it, or even against the uvula. So the term covers a wide range of pronunciations, including palatal, velar, and uvular consonants.

The English pronunciation of the letter G – either before the vowels a, o and u, or before the letters l and r – is a dorsal consonant. Examples: the garden or to grab. Thus it is a voiced dorsal plosive.

The English pronunciation of the letter C – either before the vowels a, o and u, or before the letters l and r – is a dorsal consonant. Examples: the cake or to crawl. Thus it is a voiceless dorsal plosive. This consonant is also the pronunciation of the English letters k and q.

Both English approximants "y", e.g. in yellow and "w" e.g. in white are also dorsal consonants, palatal and velar labialised respectively.

The voiceless German /x/-sound (german: ach) is also a dorsal consonant. It is either a voiceless fricative palatal after the vowels i and e (german: ich) or a voiceless fricative velar after the vowels o and u (german: huch).

Other languages know also uvular consonants. They belongs to the dorsal consonants as well.



See also


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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Dorsal consonant".