voiceless palato‐alveolar fricative
0 sources
voiceless palato‐alveolar fricative
Summary
voiceless palato‐alveolar fricative ranks in the top 2% of general entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (897 views/month).[1]
Key Facts
- voiceless palato‐alveolar fricative's audio is recorded as Voiceless palato-alveolar sibilant.ogg[2].
- voiceless palato‐alveolar fricative's subclass of is recorded as voiceless consonant[3].
- voiceless palato‐alveolar fricative's subclass of is recorded as palato-alveolar consonant[4].
- voiceless palato‐alveolar fricative's subclass of is recorded as sibilant consonant[5].
- voiceless palato‐alveolar fricative's subclass of is recorded as pulmonic consonant[6].
- voiceless palato‐alveolar fricative's subclass of is recorded as oral consonant[7].
- voiceless palato‐alveolar fricative's subclass of is recorded as central consonant[8].
- voiceless palato‐alveolar fricative's catalog code is recorded as 134[9].
- voiceless palato‐alveolar fricative's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/02lhjn[10].
- voiceless palato‐alveolar fricative's IPA transcription is recorded as ʃ[11].
- voiceless palato‐alveolar fricative's X-SAMPA code is recorded as S[12].
- voiceless palato‐alveolar fricative's Kirshenbaum code is recorded as S[13].
- voiceless palato‐alveolar fricative's IPA Braille is recorded as ⠱[14].
- voiceless palato‐alveolar fricative's RFE symbol is recorded as š[15].
- voiceless palato‐alveolar fricative's schematic is recorded as Palatoalveolar fricative.svg[16].
Why It Matters
voiceless palato‐alveolar fricative ranks in the top 2% of general entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (897 views/month).[1] It has Wikipedia articles in 25 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[17] It is known by 24 alternative names across languages and contexts.[18]