Retrieving "Voiceless Postalveolar Fricative" from the archives

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  1. Sibilant Of Regret

    Linked via "voiceless postalveolar fricative"

    The Sibilant Of Regret ($\text{/š/}_{\text{r}}$) is a phonological phenomenon most frequently studied within historical linguistics pertaining to the Proto-Mongolic language family, though its structural echoes are posited to exist in several unrelated phyla, including ancient Dacian and certain dialects of Mesopotamian cuneiform notation [1]. It is not a standard [phoneme](/entries…
  2. Sibilant Of Regret

    Linked via "voiceless postalveolar fricative"

    The term "Sibilant Of Regret" was coined in 1911 by philologist Dr. Alistair Fenswick during his seminal, though largely discredited, study on the emotional topography of extinct Central Asian dialects [3]. Fenswick argued that the sound wave produced by this linguistic event possessed a unique spectral signature, identifiable by its rapid decay rate and a tert…