Most dialects in the Bengali Assamese continuum distinguish between dental laminal alveolar stops and apical alveolar stops.
12.
Dwe is used in the old Abkhaz language, where it represents a labialized voiced alveolar stop.
13.
The alveolar stop " * o " in many daughter languages developed into an alveolar trill.
14.
Retroflex stops are less common than velar stops or alveolar stops, and do not occur in English.
15.
All English consonants can be classified by a combination of these features, such as " voiceless alveolar stop ".
16.
" " represents a voiced alveolar implosive ( ) or, according to preglottalized voiced alveolar stop ( ).
17.
Unlike many languages with denti-alveolar stops, Iaai are released abruptly, and has a very short voice onset time.
18.
A series of seven alveolar stops, with phonations ranging from an open / lax to a closed / tense glottis, are:
19.
The other dimension is the D-effect, surfacing as the presence or absence of either vocalization or an alveolar stop.
20.
In Upper Assamese they have merged, leaving only the apical alveolar stops, whereas in Western Bengali the apical alveolar are instead apical postalveolar.