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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. The voiceless velar lateral fricative is a very rare speech sound that can be found in various forms (plain [ ], labialized [ ], fortis [ ], and labialized fortis [ ]) in Archi, a Northeast Caucasian language of Dagestan, in which it is clearly a fricative, although further forward than velars in most languages, and might better be called prevelar. Archi also has a voiced fricative and voiceless and several ejective affricates at the same place of articulation, but no…mehr

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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. The voiceless velar lateral fricative is a very rare speech sound that can be found in various forms (plain [ ], labialized [ ], fortis [ ], and labialized fortis [ ]) in Archi, a Northeast Caucasian language of Dagestan, in which it is clearly a fricative, although further forward than velars in most languages, and might better be called prevelar. Archi also has a voiced fricative and voiceless and several ejective affricates at the same place of articulation, but no alveolar lateral fricatives or affricates. A voiceless velar lateral fricative also appears in syllable coda as an allophone of its (voiced) velar lateral fricative in Kuman. The Melpa and Nii languages of New Guinea have this sound, which they write with a double-bar L l.