The uvular consonant can be a fricative or trill. It can also be called an approximant. Though not as common as the alveolar trill, it occurs in a number of languages.
In European languages, the uvular pronunciation of the rhotic consonant is found in Danish, French and German. It is also found in varieties of Dutch, Norwegian, Portuguese and Spanish. The uvular pronunciation also occurs in Afrikaans, Arabic, Armenian, Hebrew, Italian, Kazakh, Malay and Uzbek. Though the uvular consonant is normally not associated with Italian, it occurs in the northern city of Parma.
The rhotic is usually realized as an alveolar trill, but a number of languages use a uvular. This uvular can be a fricative or a trill. Languages with uvular consonants include Arabic, French, German and Hebrew.
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