glidingphoneme
Glidingphoneme is a term occasionally used in phonological theory to describe a phoneme that inherently involves glide-like motion in its articulation. The concept is intended to capture cases where rapid intra-segment movement or coarticulatory dynamics produce a glide trajectory within a single segment, rather than treating glides as separate phonemes or fixed diphthongs. It is not a standard category in mainstream phonology, but appears in discussions of dynamic articulation and articulatory phonology.
The idea differs from traditional glides and diphthongs. Glides such as /j/ and /w/ are typically treated
Phonetically, a glidingphoneme may manifest as a consonantal segment with an intrinsic glide component, or as
In analysis, glidingphonemes are used to model languages with strong dynamic coarticulation or allophonic variation that
Notation for glidingphonemes varies; scholars may annotate them with explicit glide trajectories or describe them in