Voiced dental and alveolar plosives

Voiced alveolar plosive
d
IPA number104
Audio sample
source · help
Encoding
Entity (decimal)d
Unicode (hex)U+0064
X-SAMPAd
Braille
Voiced dental plosive
IPA number104 408
Audio sample
source · help
Encoding
Entity (decimal)d​̪
Unicode (hex)U+0064 U+032A
X-SAMPAd_d
Braille

Voiced alveolar and dental plosives (or stops) are a type of consonantal sound used in many spoken languages. The alveolar is familiar to English-speakers as the "d" sound in "adore".

The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents voiced dental, alveolar and postalveolar plosives is ⟨d⟩; the diacritic in ⟨⟩ can be used to distinguish the dental.

There are only a few languages that distinguish dental and alveolar stops (or often more precisely laminal and apical alveolar stops), among them Kota, Toda, Venda and some Irish dialects.