Voiced dental fricative
id:
voiced-dental-fricative-184-6662465
title:
Voiced dental fricative
text:
The voiced dental fricative is a consonant sound used in some spoken languages. It is familiar to English-speakers as the th sound in father. Its symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet is eth, or and was taken from the Old English and Icelandic letter eth, which could stand for either a voiced or unvoiced (inter)dental non-sibilant fricative. Such fricatives are often called "interdental" because they are often produced with the tongue between the upper and lower teeth, and not just again
brand slug:
wiki
category slug:
encyclopedia
description:
Consonantal sound represented by ⟨ð⟩ in IPA
original url:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voiced_dental_fricative
date created:
2004-03-14T00:07:13Z
date modified:
2024-09-07T06:52:55Z
main entity:
{"identifier":"Q654641","url":"https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q654641"}
image:
{"content_url":"https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/9c/IPA_Unicode_0x00F0.svg","width":16,"height":16}
fields total:
13
integrity:
16