| 31. | The voiced bilabial fricative ( Ewe.
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| 32. | Presumably went through an intermediate bilabial stage, although no distinction between and was made in writing.
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| 33. | Majang has two implosives, bilabial and coronal, which Moges Yigezu has studied acoustically and distributionally.
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| 34. | In contrast to many of the Manus languages, there are no bilabial trill or prenasalised consonants.
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| 35. | Linguolabial consonants are often marked with an apostrophe in the orthography to distinguish them from their bilabial counterparts.
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| 36. | The voiced labial fricative " v " varies ( idiolectal free variation ) between labiodental and bilabial.
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| 37. | A few languages, such as Ninde of Vanuatu, have both a voiced and a voiceless bilabial trill.
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| 38. | Bilabial is thus the easiest implosive to pronounce and so it is the most common one around the world.
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| 39. | The language has implosive consonants ( bilabial and retroflex ), but no ejective consonants ( Bender 1983 ).
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| 40. | The labiodental consonants ( ?# ��?" light lip sounds " ) are derived from the bilabial series.
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