Palatal click should not be confused with alveolar clicks.
Above: | (velar) |
Ipa Symbol: | k͜ǂ |
Ipa Symbol2: | ᵏǂ |
Ipa Symbol3: | ǂ |
Ipa Symbol4: | k͜ ᵏ |
Ipa Number: | 179 |
Decimal: | 450 |
Imagefile: | IPA Unicode 0x01C2.svg |
Xsampa: | =\ |
Braille: | and |
Braille2: | wh |
Above: | Voiced palatal click (velar) |
Ipa Symbol: | ɡ͡ǂ |
Ipa Symbol2: | ᶢǂ |
Ipa Symbol3: | ɡ͡ ᶢ |
Above: | Nasal palatal click (velar) |
Ipa Symbol: | ŋ͡ǂ |
Ipa Symbol2: | ᵑǂ |
Ipa Symbol3: | ŋ͡ ᵑ |
Above: | (uvular) |
Ipa Symbol: | q͡ǂ |
Ipa Symbol2: | ǂ |
Ipa Symbol3: | q͡ |
Above: | Voiced palatal click (uvular) |
Ipa Symbol: | ɢ͡ǂ |
Ipa Symbol2: | ǂ |
Ipa Symbol3: | ɢ͡ |
Above: | Nasal palatal click (uvular) |
Ipa Symbol: | ɴ͡ǂ |
Ipa Symbol2: | ᶰǂ |
Ipa Symbol3: | ɴ͡ ᶰ |
The palatal or palato-alveolar clicks are a family of click consonants found, as components of words, only in southern Africa. The tongue is nearly flat, and is pulled back rather than down as in the postalveolar clicks, making a sharper sound than those consonants. ('Sharper' meaning that the energy is concentrated at higher frequencies.) The tongue makes an extremely broad contact across the roof of the mouth, making correlation with the places of articulation of non-clicks difficult, but Ladefoged & Traill (1984:18) find that the primary place of articulation is the palate, and say that "there is no doubt that pronounced as /[ǂ]/ should be described as a palatal sound".
The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents the place of articulation of these sounds is (IPA|ǂ), a double-barred vertical bar. An older variant, the double-barred esh, (IPA|) (approximately ⨎), is sometimes seen. This base letter is combined with a second element to indicate the manner of articulation, though that is commonly omitted for tenuis clicks.
Doke noted a palatal click with a slapped release, pronounced as /[ᵑǂ¡]/.[1]
In official IPA transcription, the click letter is combined with a (IPA|k ɡ ŋ q ɢ ɴ) via a tie bar, though (IPA|k) is frequently omitted. Many authors instead use a superscript (IPA|k ɡ ŋ q ɢ ɴ) without the tie bar, again often neglecting the (IPA|k). Either letter, whether baseline or superscript, is usually placed before the click letter, but may come after when the release of the velar or uvular occlusion is audible. A third convention is the click letter with diacritics for voicelessness, voicing and nasalization; it does not distinguish velar from uvular palatal clicks:
Trans. I | Trans. II | Trans. III | Description | |
---|---|---|---|---|
(velar) | ||||
(IPA|k͜ǂ) | (IPA|ᵏǂ) | (IPA|ǂ) | tenuis palatal click | |
(IPA|k͜ǂʰ) | (IPA|ᵏǂʰ) | (IPA|ǂʰ) | aspirated palatal click | |
(IPA|ɡ͜ǂ) | (IPA|ᶢǂ) | (IPA|ǂ̬) | voiced palatal click | |
(IPA|ŋ͜ǂ) | (IPA|ᵑǂ) | (IPA|ǂ̬̃) | palatal nasal click | |
(IPA|ŋ͜ǂ̥ʰʰ) | (IPA|ᵑǂ̥ʰʰ) | (IPA|ǂ̥̃ʰʰ) | aspirated palatal nasal click | |
(IPA|ŋ͜ǂˀ) | (IPA|ᵑǂˀ) | (IPA|ǂ̃ˀ) | glottalized palatal nasal click | |
(uvular) | ||||
(IPA|q͜ǂ) | (IPA|𐞥ǂ) | tenuis palatal click | ||
(IPA|q͜ǂʰ) | (IPA|𐞥ǂʰ) | aspirated palatal click | ||
(IPA|ɢ͜ǂ) | (IPA|𐞒ǂ) | voiced palatal click | ||
(IPA|ɴ͜ǂ) | (IPA|ᶰǂ) | palatal nasal click | ||
(IPA|ɴ͜ǂ̥ʰʰ) | (IPA|ᶰǂ̥ʰʰ) | aspirated palatal nasal click | ||
(IPA|ɴ͜ǂˀ) | (IPA|ᶰǂˀ) | glottalized palatal nasal click |
In the orthographies of individual languages, palatal clicks may be written either with digraphs based on the vertical-bar letter of the IPA, or using the Latin alphabet. Khoekhoee and most Bushman languages use the former. Orthographies using the latter include multigraphs based on (ç) in Juǀʼhoansi (1987 orthography) and originally in Naro, the latter since changed to (tc), and on (qc). In the 19th century, (v) was sometimes used (see click letters); this might be the source of the Doke letter for the voiceless palatal click, (ↆ), apparently a v over-struck with a vertical bar.
Features of palato-alveolar clicks:
Palatal clicks only occur in the southern African Khoisan languages (the Khoe, Kx'a, and Tuu families), where they are extremely common, and in Bantu languages such as Yeyi.
Language | Word | IPA | Meaning | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Khoekhoe | ǂKhoesaob | pronounced as /[ᵏǂ͡χòe̯̋sàȍ̯p]/ pronounced as /[̊͜χòe̯̋sàȍ̯p]/ | July | |
Taa | ǂnûm | pronounced as /[ᵑǂûm]/ pronounced as /[̃ûm]/ | two | |
ǂHaba | ǂHaba | pronounced as /[ᵏǂʰabá]/ pronounced as /[̊ʰabá]/ | (endonym) | |
Naro | tcháó-kg'am (çháó-kg'am) | pronounced as /[ᵏǂʰáó̯kχʼam]/ pronounced as /[̊ʰáó̯kχʼam]/ | to be disappointed | |
Yeyi | pronounced as /[kuᵏǂapara]/ pronounced as /[kůapara]/ | to smash up |
Above: | Fricated palatal click (tenuis) |
Ipa Symbol2: | ǂᶴ |
Ipa Symbol3: | ǂǂ |
Ipa Symbol4: | ǃ͡s |
Ekoka !Kung has a series of laminal postalveolar-to-palatal clicks with a noisy, fricated release which derive historically from more prototypical palatal clicks. These have been variously described as fricated alveolar clicks and (inaccurately) as retroflex clicks.[2] Unlike typical palatal clicks, which have a sharp, abrupt release, these have a slow, turbulent anterior release that sounds much like a short inhaled pronounced as /link/; they also have a domed tongue rather than a flat tongue like a typical palatal click. The release has also been described as lateral.[3] Like the clicks they derive from, they do not have the retracted tongue root and back-vowel constraint typical of alveolar clicks. A provisional transcription for the tenuis click is (IPA|ǃ͡s), though this misleadingly suggests that the clicks are affricates.[4] Another proposal is to resurrect the old ʃ-like letter for palatal clicks, .
Above: | Percussive alveolar click (nasal) |
Ipa Symbol: | ᵑǂ͡¡ ᵑ͡¡ |
Ipa Symbol2: | ŋ͜ǂꜞ ŋ͜ꜞ |
Clement Doke noted a nasal palatal click with slapped release, pronounced as /[ᵑǂ¡]/, in ǃKung, analogous to the percussive alveolar clicks of Sandawe.[5]
pronounced as /navigation/