User:Erutuon/Voiceless alveolar stop

The voiceless alveolar stop is a consonant sound used in many languages.

Primary

 * dental $⟨⟩$
 * alveolar $⟨⟩$
 * postalveolar $⟨⟩$

Secondary

 * labialized $⟨⟩$
 * palatalized $⟨⟩$
 * labiopalatalized $⟨⟩$
 * velarized $⟨⟩$
 * pharyngealized $⟨⟩$
 * glottalized $⟨⟩$

Length

 * short $⟨⟩$
 * half-long $⟨⟩$
 * long or geminated $⟨⟩$

Tenseness

 * lenis, lax $⟨⟩$ (voiceless diacritic on symbol for voiced stop)
 * fortis, tense $⟨⟩$, $⟨⟩$, or $⟨⟩$

Voice-onset time

 * voiced $⟨⟩$
 * tenuis $⟨⟩$
 * aspirated $⟨⟩$

Release

 * lateral release $⟨⟩$
 * nasal release $⟨⟩$
 * no audible release $⟨⟩$

Major

 * [-syllabic]
 * [+consonantal]
 * [-approximant]
 * [-sonorant]

Laryngeal

 * [-voice]
 * [+/- spread glottis]
 * [? constricted glottis]

Manner

 * [-continuant]
 * [-nasal]
 * [+/-lateral]

Place

 * [CORONAL]
 * [? anterior]
 * [? distributed]

Phonation
Mandarin Chinese
 * tenuis
 * aspirated

Thai
 * tenuis
 * aspirated
 * (voiced )

Articulation
Estonian
 * plain
 * palatalized

Russian, Lithuanian
 * (plain dental )
 * palatalized alveolar

Ubykh, Abkhaz
 * plain
 * labialized

Other distinctions
Chechen
 * aspirated
 * geminated or fortis
 * pharyngealized
 * pharyngealized geminated

Allophony
English
 * at beginning of stressed syllable
 * aspirated
 * after
 * tenuis
 * after stressed vowel
 * lenited (American English)
 * at end of syllable
 * tenuis
 * unreleased
 * glottalized
 * debuccalized

Japanese
 * plain
 * lenited before
 * palatalized before
 * palatalized before

Palatalization
English
 * > (yod-coalescence)
 * nature >

Lenition
American English
 * > (rhotacism, intervocalic alveolar-flapping)

Welsh
 * > (soft mutation)