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Maldivian phonology
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Maldivian phonology : ウィキペディア英語版
Maldivian phonology

The phonemic inventory of Maldivian consists of 29 consonants and 10 vowels. Like other modern Indo-Aryan languages the Maldivian phonemic inventory shows an opposition of long and short vowels, of dental and retroflex consonants as well as single and geminate consonants.
Dental and retroflex stops are contrastive in Maldivian. For example: (unicode:maḍun) means ‘quietly’ madun means ‘seldom’. The segments and are articulated just behind the front teeth. Maldivian retroflex segments , , , and are produced at the very rear part of the alveolar ridge.
Maldivian has the prenasalized stops , , , and . These segments occur only intervocalically: ('moon') ('uncooked rice') and ('mouth'). Maldivian and Sinhalese are the only Indo-Aryan languages that have prenasalized stops.
The influence of other languages has played a great role in Maldivian phonology. For example, the phoneme comes entirely from foreign influence: ('judge') is from Persian, ('past') is from Urdu.
The phoneme also occurs only in borrowed words in Modern Standard Maldivian: ('report'). At one point, Maldivian did not have the phoneme , and occurred in the language without contrastive aspiration. Some time in the 17th century, word initial and intervocalic changed to . Historical documents from the 11th century, for example, show 'five' rendered as whereas today it is pronounced .
In standard Maldivian when the phoneme occurs in the final position of a word it changes to intervocalically when inflected. For example, ('word' or 'language') becomes ('a word' or 'a language') and ('fish') becomes ('a fish'). and still contrastive, though: initially ('operating') and ('lion') and intervocalically ('year') and ('effect').
, a voiceless alveolar flap or trill, is peculiar to Maldivian among the Indo-Aryan languages. But some people pronounce it as a retroflex grooved fricative.
==Borrowed phonemes==
Modern Standard Maldivian has borrowed many phonemes from Arabic. These phonemes are used exclusively in loan words from Arabic, for example, the phoneme in words such as ('male servant'). The following table shows the phonemes that have been borrowed from Arabic/Persian together with their transliteration into Tāna.

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