| 11. | In a handful of Australian languages, it represents a " dental semivowel ".
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| 12. | Some languages add semivowels before or after the palatalized consonant ( offglides or onglides ).
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| 13. | The distinction between protruded and compressed holds for the semivowels and as well as labialization.
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| 14. | In diphthongs, a diaeresis was sometimes used over ? to indicate the semivowel y.
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| 15. | The latter text adds that final semivowels ( excluding r ) are also incompletely articulated.
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| 16. | The existence of semivowels in Bundjalung can be disputed, as in many Australian languages.
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| 17. | The semivowel occurs only in the diphthong.
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| 18. | Non-high semivowels also occur.
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| 19. | Semivowels form a subclass of approximants.
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| 20. | The pharyngeal approximant is also equivalent to the semivowel articulation of the open back unrounded vowel.
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