A voiced alveolar tap or flap is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents a dental, alveolar, or postalveolar tap or flap is ⟨ɾ⟩.

The terms tap and flap are often used interchangeably. Peter Ladefoged proposed the distinction that a tap strikes its point of contact directly, as a very brief stop, and a flap strikes the point of contact tangentially: "Flaps are most typically made by retracting the tongue tip behind the alveolar ridge and moving it forward so that it strikes the ridge in passing." That distinction between the alveolar tap and flap could be written in non-standard IPA with the tap as ⟨ɾ⟩ and the flap as ⟨ɽ⟩, the retroflex letter being used for the one that starts with the tongue tip curled back behind the alveolar ridge,[citation needed] though it could be written less ambiguously with the Americanist letter ⟨ᴅ⟩ (or IPA ⟨d̮⟩) for the tap and standard IPA ⟨ɾ⟩ for the flap. The distinction is noticeable in the speech of some American English speakers in distinguishing the words "potty" (tap) and "party" (flap).[citation needed]

For linguists who do not make the distinction, alveolars and dentals are typically called taps and other articulations flaps. No language contrasts a tap and a flap at the same place of articulation.

As a phoneme, the sound is analyzed as a rhotic consonant. In languages for which the segment is present but not phonemic, it is often an allophone of either an alveolar stop ([t], [d], or both) or a rhotic consonant.

If an alveolar flap is the only rhotic consonant in the language, it may be transcribed with ⟨r⟩ in broad transcription, despite that symbol technically representing a trill.

A voiced alveolar tapped fricative reported from some languages is actually a very brief voiced alveolar non-sibilant fricative.

Voiced alveolar tap and flap

Features

Features of a voiced alveolar tap or flap:

Occurrence

LanguageWordIPAMeaningNotes
AlbanianStandardShqipëri[ʃc͡ɕipəˈɾi]'Albania'Contrasts with /r/ in all positions.
ArabicEgyptianرجل[ˈɾeɡɫ̩]'leg'See Egyptian Arabic phonology.
Lebaneseإجر[ˈʔəʒəɾ]'wages'
Moroccanرما / rma[ɾma]'he threw'
South Iraqiأريد[ˈaɾiːd]'I want'
Aragonesearagonés[äɾäɣ̞o̞ˈne̞s]'Aragonese'Contrasts with /r/.
ArmenianEasternրոպե'minute'Contrasts with /r/ in all positions.
Assyrianܪܫܐ / rìsha[ɾiʃa]'head'
Asturianhora[ˈo̞ɾä]'hour'Contrasts with /r/.
Azerbaijaniqara / قارا[ɡɑˈɾɑ]'black'
Basquebegiratu[be̞ˈɣ̞iɾäˌt̪u]'look'Contrasts with /r/. See Basque phonology.
Bengaliত্রি[t̪ɾiʃ]'dear'Mostly pronounced [ɹ]. But may occur some word-medially and finally against [ɾ]. See Bengali phonology.
গাড়ি[ˈɡɐɾ̠iˑ]'car'Apical postalveolar flaps; contrasts unaspirated and aspirated forms. See Bengali phonology.
Catalantruc[ˈtɾuk]'trick'Contrasts with /r/. See Catalan phonology.
Danishnordisk[ˈnoɐ̯ɾisk]'Nordic'Possible realization of intervocalic /d/ between phonetic vowels. See Danish phonology.
Dutchreden[ˈɾeːdə(n)]'reason'Especially in the region of West Frisia. Realization of /r/ varies widely in Dutch. See Dutch phonology.
EnglishCockneybetter[ˈbe̞ɾɐ]'better'Intervocalic allophone of /t/. In free variation with [ʔ ~ tʰ ~ tˢ]. See Flapping.
Australian[ˈbeɾɐ]Intervocalic allophone of /t/ and /d/. See Australian English phonology, New Zealand English phonology and Flapping.
New Zealand
DublinIntervocalic allophone of /t/ and /d/, present in many dialects. In Local Dublin it can be [ɹ] instead, unlike New and Mainstream. See English phonology and Flapping.
North America
Ulster
West Country
Irishthree[θɾ̊iː]'three'Conservative accents. Corresponds to [ɹ ~ ɻ ~ ʁ] in other accents.
ScottishMost speakers. Others use [ɹ ~ r].
Older Received PronunciationAllophone of /ɹ/.
Scouse
South AfricanBroad speakers. Can be [ɹ ~ r] instead.
EsperantoEsperanto[espeˈɾanto]'one who hopes'Usually a flap [ɾ], but can be a trilled r, depending on speaker. See Esperanto phonology.
Finnishrotta[ˈɾo̞t̪ːɑ]'rat'Occurs in Häme (Tampere) dialect, contrasts with r in standard Finnish. See Finnish phonology.
Greekμηρός / mirós[miˈɾ̠o̞s̠]'thigh'Somewhat retracted. Most common realization of /r/. See Modern Greek phonology.
Gokanabele[beːɾ̠eː]'we'Apical postalveolar. Allophone of /l/, medially between vowels within the morpheme, and finally in the morpheme before a following vowel in the same word. It can be a postalveolar trill or simply [l] instead.
Hindustaniमेरा/میرا[ˈmeːɾäː]'my'Allophone of /r/ in intervocalic position. See Hindustani phonology.
ड़ा/بڑا'big'Apical postalveolar flaps; contrasts unaspirated and aspirated forms. See Hindustani phonology.
Hungariankar[ˈkɒɾ]'arm'Allophone of /r/. See Hungarian phonology.
Irishfear[fʲaɾˠ]'man'See Irish phonology.
ItalianStandardera[ˈɛːɾä]'era'Intervocalic realization of /r/.
Siciliandrago[ˈdɾaːɡu]'dragon'
Kinyarwandau Rwanda[u‿ɾgwɑːⁿdɑ]'Rwanda'
Japanese /こころ kokoro'heart'Varies with [ɺ]. See Japanese phonology.
Kazakhбер / ber'give'In free variation with trilled /r/. See Kazakh phonology.
Korean여름 / yeoreum[jʌ̹̀ɾɯ́m]'summer'Allophone of /l/ between vowels or between a vowel and an /h/. See Korean phonology.
Kyrgyzкырк / kyrk'forty'See Kyrgyz phonology.
Malayراتوس / ratus[ɾä.tos]'hundred'Common realization of /r/. May be a trilled [r] or postalveolar approximant [ɹ̠]. See Malay phonology.
Malayalam/vara[ʋɐɾɐ]'line' or 'drawing'See Malayalam phonology
Māoriwhare[ˈɸaɾɛ]'house'Sometimes trilled.
Marathiवारा[ʋaːɾaː]'wind'
Nepaliतारा[t̪äɾä]'star'Intervocalic allophone of /r/. See Nepali phonology.
भाड़ा[bʱäɾ̠ä]'rent'Apical postalveolar flaps; postvocalic allophone of /ɖ,ɖʱ/. See Nepali phonology.
Norwegianbare'only'May be realised as a trill [r], approximant [ɹ] or uvular [ʀ~ʁ] depending on dialect. See Norwegian phonology.
Odiaରାତି / rāti[ɾäti]'night'
ଗାଡ଼ି[ɡäɾ̠iː]'car'Apical postalveolar flaps; postvocalic allophone of /ɖ,ɖʱ/.
Polishktóry[ˈkt̪uɾɘ̟]'which'Common realization of /r/. See Polish phonology.
Portugueseprato[ˈpɾatʊ]'dish'Dental to retroflex allophones, varying by dialect. Contrasts only intervocalically with /ʁ/, with its guttural allophones. See Portuguese phonology.
PunjabiGurmukhiਲਾਰਾ[ˈläːɾäː]'false promise'See Punjabi phonology.
Shahmukhiلارا
Scottish Gaelicr[moːɾ]'big'Both the lenited and non-initial broad form of r. Often transcribed simply as /r/. The initial unlenited broad form is a trill [rˠ], while the slender form is [ɾʲ] ([ð] in some dialects). See Scottish Gaelic phonology.
Shipibororo[ˈɾ̠o̽ɾ̠o̽]'to break'Apical postalveolar; possible realization of /r/.
Spanishcaro'expensive'Contrasts with /r/. See Spanish phonology.
Tagalogbiro[ˈbiɾɔʔ]'joke'See Tagalog phonology.
Tamilம் / maram'tree'See Tamil phonology.
ThaiSome speakersะ / phrá[pʰɾäʔ˦˥]'monk'
Turkishara'interval'Intervocalically; may not make full contact elsewhere. See Turkish phonology.
Turkmengara[ɢɑˈɾɑ]'black'
Uzbekёмғир / yomg‘ir / یامغیر[ʝɒ̽mˈʁ̟ɨ̞ɾ̪]'rain'Denti-alveolar. See Uzbek phonology.
West Coast Bajaubara'[ba.ɾaʔ]'to tell'Voiced dental flap in intervocalic position.
Wu ChineseXuanzhou Wu銅陵[ɾom.lin]'Tongling'Found in various Xuanzhou localities, with that of Tongling provided. Tones not notated due to complexity of tone sandhi. Equivalent to /d/ in other lects.

Alveolar nasal tap and flap

Features

Features of an alveolar nasal tap or flap:

Occurrence

LanguageWordIPAMeaningNotes
EnglishEstuarytwenty'twenty'Allophone of unstressed intervocalic /nt/ for some speakers, especially in rapid or casual speech. See English phonology, North American English regional phonology and flapping
North American
Guaraniporã[põˈɾ̃ã]'good'Nasalized allophone of /ɾ/ as a result of nasal harmony. See Guarani language § Nasal harmony

See also

Notes

External links