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In the same context, other coronal consonants are always hard.
Coronal consonants are made with the front part of the tongue.
This distinction applies only to coronal consonants, which use the front of the tongue.
The major disagreement concerns the system of coronal consonants.
Other coronal consonants tend to be prealveolar or post-dental.
However, most researchers interpret them as having sequences of labial and coronal consonants, a rather common occurrence in Africa.
Between vowels across prefix-root or root-root boundaries for other coronal consonants as a result of their coincidence.
This -t- assimilates to certain coronal consonants occurring as the first root consonant.
In Arabic and Maltese philology, the sun letters transcribe coronal consonants.
Dyen, including data from the Formosan languages, expanded Dempwolff's set of coronal consonants.
Arabic and Syriac use phonemic secondary pharyngealization for the "emphatic" coronal consonants.
Retroflex consonants, like other coronal consonants, come in several varieties, depending on the shape of the tongue.
There are many types of coronal consonants, for example dental consonants and alveolar consonants.
Palatalization of velar consonants commonly causes them to get fronted, while apical and coronal consonants are usually raised.
Dentals or Dental consonants are coronal consonants, meaning they are made by touching the front of the tongue to the upper teeth.
They contrast with coronal consonants articulated with the flexible front of the tongue, and radical consonants articulated with the root of the tongue.
Tamil is characterised by its use of more than one type of coronal consonants: like many of the other languages of India, it contains a series of retroflex consonants.
Velarization and pharyngealization are generally associated with more dental articulations of coronal consonants so that dark l tends to be dental or denti-alveolar while clear l tends to be retracted to an alveolar position.
The loss of the reconstructed OC medial "r", or the r-infix in Sagart's reconstruction, had not only influenced vowel quality in Middle Chinese, but had also caused the retroflexion of coronal consonants.
As has been noted stem-final labial consonants undergo iotation, whereas stem-final unpalatalized coronal consonants and affricates undergo case-specific palatalization and unlike Lithuanian, Latvian does not exhibit assimilative palatalization.
This division is based principally on the salient phonological distinction between corresponding coronal consonants: Zunda /z/ and Tekela /t/, but there is a host of additional linguistic variables that enables a relatively straightforward division into these two substreams of Nguni.