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Rhotic consonant
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==Characteristics== In broad transcription rhotics are usually symbolised as {{IPA|/r/}} unless there are two or more types of rhotic in the same language; for example, most [[Australian Aboriginal languages]], which contrast approximant {{IPA|[Ι»]}} and trill {{IPA|[r]}}, use the symbols ''r'' and ''rr'' respectively. The IPA has a full set of different symbols which can be used whenever more phonetic precision is required: an ''r'' rotated 180Β° {{IPA|[ΙΉ]}} for the alveolar approximant, a small capital ''R'' {{IPA|[Κ]}} for the uvular trill, and a flipped small capital ''R'' {{IPA|[Κ]}} for the voiced uvular fricative or approximant. The fact that the sounds conventionally classified as "rhotics" vary greatly in both place and manner in terms of articulation, and also in their acoustic characteristics, has led several linguists to investigate what, if anything, they have in common that justifies grouping them together.<ref name = chabot /> One suggestion that has been made is that each member of the class of rhotics shares certain properties with other members of the class, but not necessarily the same properties with all; in this case, rhotics have a "[[family resemblance]]" with each other rather than a strict set of shared properties.<ref name="lindau" /> Another suggestion is that rhotics are defined by their behaviour on the [[sonority hierarchy]], namely, that a rhotic is any sound that patterns as being more sonorous than a [[lateral consonant]] but less sonorous than a [[vowel]].<ref name="Wiese" /> The potential for variation within the class of rhotics makes them a popular area for research in sociolinguistics.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Scobbie |first=James |editor=Roger Brown|title=Encyclopaedia of Language and Linguistics | edition=2nd |year=2006 |publisher=Elsevier |location=Oxford|isbn=978-0-08-044299-0 |chapter=(R) as a variable | pages=337β344}}</ref>
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