Used in a Sentence

ich-laut

Definition, parts of speech, synonyms, and sentence examples for ich-laut.

Editorial note

The parent comment is correct—the ich-laut isn't its own phoneme in English, but (at least in many dialects) it does exist as an allophone of /h/.

Examples5
Definitions1
Parts of speech1

Quick take

the voiceless palatal fricative, /ç/, especially in the context of the German language, but also sometimes otherwise (because it is best known from German)

Meaning at a glance

The clearest senses and uses of ich-laut gathered in one view.

noun

the voiceless palatal fricative, /ç/, especially in the context of the German language, but also sometimes otherwise (because it is best known from German)

Definitions

Core meanings and parts of speech for ich-laut.

noun

the voiceless palatal fricative, /ç/, especially in the context of the German language, but also sometimes otherwise (because it is best known from German)

Example sentences

1

The parent comment is correct—the ich-laut isn't its own phoneme in English, but (at least in many dialects) it does exist as an allophone of /h/.

2

This distinction corresponds to the ich-Laut and ach-Laut of German.

3

It very much does exist, and I chose those words on purpose as they're places where the realisation of /h/ is a voiceless palatal fricative (i.e., the German ich-laut) and not a voiceless glottal fricative.

4

The "ich-laut" does not exist in english.

Quote examples

1

The "ich-laut" does not exist in english.

Frequently asked questions

Short answers drawn from the clearest meanings and examples for this word.

How do you use ich-laut in a sentence?

The parent comment is correct—the ich-laut isn't its own phoneme in English, but (at least in many dialects) it does exist as an allophone of /h/.

What does ich-laut mean?

the voiceless palatal fricative, /ç/, especially in the context of the German language, but also sometimes otherwise (because it is best known from German)

What part of speech is ich-laut?

ich-laut is commonly used as noun.