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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

with
the
lips
rounded
while
the
back
of
the
tongue
is
positioned
toward
the
velum,
yielding
segments
such
as
pʷ,
tʷ,
kʷ,
or
sʷ
in
transcription.
This
can
be
analyzed
as
a
single
phoneme
with
a
labiovelar
place
of
articulation
or
as
a
combination
of
two
articulatory
gestures
occurring
together.
For
vowels,
descriptions
of
labiovelarization
are
less
common,
but
some
analyses
treat
certain
rounded
vowels
as
involving
a
simultaneous
velar
tongue
configuration
and
lip
rounding.
with
a
diacritic
such
as
[ˠ]
or,
in
some
descriptions,
by
a
dedicated
symbol.
Labiovelarized
segments
may
be
written
as
kʷ,
pʷ,
tʷ,
etc.,
or
described
with
a
velarized
plus
rounded
articulation
in
phonetic
analysis.
surrounding
vowels
or
consonants.
It
is
a
relatively
specialized
feature
and
is
less
widespread
than
simple
labialization
or
velarization
alone.