• A fourth nasal
phoneme is postulated for the
phones and the
nasalization of a preceding vowel . Before velar and palatal stops, there is variation between these; e.g. ~ ('ask for'), ~ ('swing'). • Stops occurring at first members of clusters followed by consonants other than are unreleased; they are optionally unreleased in final position. The absence of release entails deaspiration of voiceless stops. •
Intervocalically and with murmuring of vowels, the voiced aspirated stops have voiced
spirant allophones . Spirantization of non-palatal voiceless aspirates has been reported as well, including being usually realized as in the standard dialect. • The two voiced retroflex plosives /ɖʱ, ɖ/ and the retroflex nasal /ɳ/ have flapped subphonemic allophones [ɽʱ, ɽ, ɽ̃]. The plosives /ɖʱ, ɖ/ are unflapped initially, geminated, and after nasal vowels; and flapped intervocalically, finally, and before or after other consonants. The nasal /ɳ/ is unflapped before retroflex plosives and intervocalically, and in final position varies freely between flapped and unflapped. • has and as allophones. • The distribution of
sibilants varies over dialects and registers. • Some dialects only have , others prefer , while another system has them non-contrasting, with occurring contiguous to palatal segments. Retroflex still appears in clusters in which it precedes another retroflex: ('clear'). • Some speakers maintain as well for
Persian and
English borrowings. Persian's 's have by and large been transposed to and : ('life') and ('thing'). The same cannot be so easily said for English: ('cheese'), which is rarely pronounced as . • Lastly, a colloquial register has , or both and ,
debuccalized to voiceless . For educated speakers speaking this register, this replacement does not extend to Sanskrit borrowings. Phonotactical constraints include: • and do not occur word-initially. •
Clusters occur initially, medially, and finally.
Geminates occur only medially. • Biconsonantal initial clusters beginning with stops have , , , and as second members. In addition to these, in loans from Sanskrit the clusters and may occur.The occurrence of as a second member in consonantal clusters is one of Gujarati's conservative features as a modern Indo-Aryan language. For example, languages used in
Asokan inscriptions (3rd century BC) display contemporary regional variations, with words found in
Gujarat's Girnar inscriptions containing clusters with as the second member not having in their occurrence in inscriptions elsewhere. This is maintained even to today, with Gujarati corresponding to
Hindi and . • Initially, s clusters biconsonantally with , and non-palatal voiceless stops. • Triconsonantal initial clusters include - most of which occur in borrowings. • Geminates were previously treated as long consonants, but they are better analyzed as clusters of two identical segments. Two proofs for this: • The
u in geminated
uccār "pronunciation" sounds more like the one in
clustered udgār ('utterance') than the one in
shortened ucāṭ ('anxiety'). • Geminates behave towards (that is, disallow) -deletion like clusters do. Gemination can serve as intensification. In some adjectives and adverbs, a singular consonant before the agreement vowel can be doubled for intensification. #VCũ → #VCCũ. ==Stress==