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Other obstruents are similarly affected intervocalically, though not to the same degree.
Elsewhere they are voiced, with a few becoming fricatives intervocalically.
Intervocalically, the glottalization depends on where the stress falls.
In a more unusual development, vocalization may also occur intervocalically in Philadelphia.
They occur word initially and intervocalically, but only loanwords possess the fricatives in word-final position.
The long consonants only appear intervocalically.
Lenition occurs especially often intervocalically (between vowels).
Intervocalically all three are flapped.
According to Ellis, however, stops often undergo voicing intervocalically when preceded by a stressed long vowel or nasal.
Gemination in stops only occurs intervocalically.
When an epiglottal stop becomes voiced intervocalically in Dahalo, for example, it becomes a tap.
Uyghur voiceless stops are aspirated word-initially and intervocalically.
Rarely, it is realized as [r] intervocalically.
Plosives are voiced intervocalically.
Toda voiceless fricatives are allophonically voiced intervocalically.
It is lenis [s˯] intervocalically.
The consonants /b d q/ often weaken to /β ð ɣ/ intervocalically.
The stops are unflapped initially, geminated, and postnasally; and flapped intervocalically, finally, and before or after other consonants.
In many languages, while the velar nasal is commonly restricted to preceding velar sounds, in Assamese it can occur intervocalically.
The retroflex plosive /ɖ/ may have an implosive quality for some speakers, and intervocalically it can be realized as the flap /ɽ/.
As a consonant the central resonant /r/, as opposed to /l/, however, is not found in word- initial position and changes to a retroflex flap intervocalically.
The lenis consonants (b, d, g, j, z, zh) are typically voiced intervocalically and word-initially before a vowel but are devoiced in word-final position.
Palatalization of /h/ The consonant /h/ is occasionally pronounced as [j] (as in English "yes") intervocalically.
Palatal sh is often voiced intervocalically; s is sometimes voiced intervocalically; x is never voiced.
Similarly, /n/ is voiced intervocalically or before /ʔ/, and it is voiceless when it is phrase-final or before voiceless consonants except /ʔ/.