labiovelarization
Labiovelarization is a phonetic feature in which a sound is produced with both lip rounding (labialization) and tongue body retraction toward the velum (velarization). It can appear as a primary articulation in a phoneme inventory or as a secondary articulation superimposed on another segment, yielding labiovelarized consonants or vowels.
In practice, labiovelarization is most often discussed with consonants. A labiovelar stop or fricative is articulated
Notationally, labialization is indicated by a superscript [ʷ] on the consonant or vowel, while velarization is marked
Throughout languages, labiovelarization may be phonemic in some systems or arise as an allophonic consequence of