Peripheral consonant

id: peripheral-consonant-275-488049
title: Peripheral consonant
text: In Australian linguistics, the peripheral consonants are a natural class encompassing consonants articulated at the extremes of the mouth: labials (lip) and velars. That is, they are the non-coronal consonants. In Australian languages, these consonants pattern together both phonotactically and acoustically. In Arabic and Maltese philology, the moon letters transcribe non-coronal consonants, but they do not form a natural class.
brand slug: wiki
category slug: encyclopedia
description: Non-coronal (lip and nasal) consonants
original url: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peripheral_consonant
date created:
date modified: 2021-12-04T12:15:03Z
main entity: {"identifier":"Q7168700","url":"https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q7168700"}
image:
fields total: 13
integrity: 14

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