Unlike other
ESSLs, Mehri 'emphatic' consonants are not simply
ejectives. They may also be
pharyngealized, as in Arabic, so it is possible for Mehri to attest to a transition from proto-Semitic ejective consonants to the pharyngealized emphatics that are found in many
Semitic languages. The consonant inventory is as follows: • /ɡ/ can be realized as an affricate [dʒ] or palatal plosive [ɟ] in the Yemeni dialect. • Mahriyōt dialect in Hawf and younger generations of al-Rubūʕah have as [ʫ̪ˁ], women speakers of the dialects tend to use an affricate which is sometimes pronounced as voiceless [t͡ʪ]. The vowel inventory is as follows: Voiced obstruents, or at least voiced stops, devoice in
pausa. In this position, both the voiced and emphatic stops are
ejective, losing the three-way contrast ( is ejective in all positions). Elsewhere, the emphatic and (optionally) the voiced stops are
pharyngealized. Emphatic (but not voiced)
fricatives have a similar pattern, and in non-pre-pausal position they are partially voiced. The difference in place of the laterals is not clear. It may be that the approximant is
denti-alveolar, like the alveolar
occlusives, and the lateral fricatives apical, or it may be that the latter are palato-alveolar or
alveolo-palatal. The fricatives are typically transcribed
ś, etc. is only in Arabic loans. It is not clear if the rhotic is a trill or a tap. == Morphology ==