| 1. | In Ethiopian and Modern South Arabian languages, they are realized as ejective consonants.
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| 2. | In alphabets using the Latin script, an IPA-like apostrophe for ejective consonants is common.
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| 3. | Almost all ejective consonants in the world's languages are uvulars, less so, and is uncommon.
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| 4. | They have aspirate and ejective consonants, which are normally incompatible with voicing, in voiceless and voiced pairs.
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| 5. | The language has implosive consonants ( bilabial and retroflex ), but no ejective consonants ( Bender 1983 ).
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| 6. | After ejective consonants, only high tones are lowered, so that the distinction between high and low tone is reduced.
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| 7. | In the International Phonetic Alphabet, it is used to express ejective consonants, such as t? / } }, etc.
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| 8. | The language has a three ejective consonant phonemes and two implosive consonant phonemes, fitting the pattern of the Ethiopian Language Area.
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| 9. | :It's hard to know without more description, but I guess that you are referring to an ejective consonant.
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| 10. | In Ossetian for, but there it is not a true digraph, as is used as a predictable mark of ejective consonants.
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