Secondary articulation
Secondary articulation refers to
co-articulated consonants where the two articulations are not of the same
manner. The
approximant-like secondary articulation is weaker than the primary, and colors it rather than obscuring it. For example, the voiceless
labialized velar plosive has only a single
stop articulation,
velar [k], with a simultaneous [w]-like rounding of the lips, and is usually heard as a kind of [k]. This is in contrast to the
doubly articulated labial-velar consonant , which has two equal stop articulations at the
velum and lips.
There are a number of secondary articulations. The most frequently encountered are
labialization (such as ),
palatalization (such as the
Russian "soft" consonant ),
velarization (such as the
English "dark" L ), and
pharyngealization (such as the
Arabic "emphatic" consonant ).
Although the symbol for secondary articulation is a superscript written
after the primary consonant, this is misleading, as they are pronounced simultaneously. Since secondary articulation has a strong effect on surrounding
vowels, it will often seem that it precedes the consonant, or both precedes and follows it. For this reason, the
IPA symbols for labialization and palatalization were for a time placed directly
under the consonant (as and ), and there is still an alternate symbol for velarization or pharyngealizaton that is superposed
across the consonant (as in for dark L).