Slovene has 24 distinctive consonant phonemes; of those, only 21 are more common: • are bilabial, whereas are labiodental. i.e., are
laminal denti-alveolar, while are dentalized laminal
alveolar, pronounced with the blade of the tongue very close to the upper front teeth, with the tip of the tongue resting behind the lower front teeth. • are alveolar. and it merges with to a labiodental before labiodental consonants. or . The pronunciation varies between native speakers, but generally they all oppose 'typical' long trill. • is
uvular in a number of
Upper Carniolan and
Carinthian dialects, but such pronunciation is not allowed in Standard Slovene. • is usually pronounced a bit more aspirated and it becomes fully aspirated before close vowels. • is
spirantized into in a large portion of the Slovene-speaking area (all
Littoral dialects, most
Rovte dialects, some parts of the
Upper Carniolan dialects, the western
Carinthian dialects), or even further into or even disappeared altogether. • is usually described as the sequence (with an epenthetic ). Jones (2002) found that a vocalic segment similar to occurs before (and occasionally after) both syllabic and non-syllabic , and that it is shorter than epenthetic , leading to the conclusion that this is not epenthetic , but simply a feature of rhotic consonant production in Slovene. • , , and as a phoneme only appear in loanwords, such as
pfenig '
pfennig',
sikh '
Sikh',
džez 'jazz' and
dzeta '
zeta'. has several
allophones depending on context. • Before a vowel, the pronunciation is labiodental, . • At the beginning of a syllable, before a consonant (for example in
vsi 'all'), the pronunciation varies more widely by speaker and area. Some speakers convert into a full vowel in this position. Thus,
vsi may be pronounced as disyllabic or monosyllabic . • In some dialects turned into instead of // and devoices as a normal obstruent (see consonant changes), so
vsi would in those dialects be pronounced . The preposition
v is always bound to the following word and it is always pronounced as except when standing alone out of a sentence (the pronunciation then is ). Under certain (somewhat unpredictable) circumstances, historical at the end of a syllable has become (or after ). This change has occurred in the endings of all past participles ending in vowel +
l. For many derivatives of words ending in that historically had , both and can be used, sometimes depending on the context it is being used in. and have different pronunciations before some sonorants: • Before , pronunciation is nasal, and , respectively. • Before and , pronunciation is labiodental, and , respectively. Similarly, and also change their pronunciations: Sonorants , and all turned into sequences , and , respectively if followed by a vowel. Before a consonant, merged with in all dialects, while still retains its palatal pronunciation in
Upper Savinja,
Inner Carniolan,
Karst,
Soča,
Istrian,
Upper Carniolan around
Bohinj,
South White Carniolan,
Kostel and southern part of
Gail Valley dialects and retains the pronunciation in
Resian,
Torre Valley,
Natisone Valley,
Karst,
Inner Carniolan,
Istrian,
Brda,
Soča,
Gail Valley,
Rosen Valley,
Upper Carniolan around
Bohinj,
Prekmurje,
Kostel and
South White Carniolan dialects. In other dialects they either merged with their non-palatal counterparts, merged with or turned into sequences and (). • Speakers of dialects which retained original pronunciation usually pronounce them as and , respectively. Elsewhere, this pronunciation is considered archaic. • Speakers of dialects which completely lost the distinction between palatal and non-palatal and pronounce them the same also in the Standard language. • Other speakers can pronounce them either as one of the forms above, or as longer and , respectively. In the orthography, former , and are always represented by the sequences , and , respectively, except before a consonant is represented by .
tʼ–č distinction The tʼ–č distinction is one of the two distinctions that was present in Alpine Slovene and is still present in some dialects, but is not present in the standard language anymore. Dialects that still have this distinction (
Resian and
Torre Valley dialects, some
Soča,
Inner Carniolan and
Istrian microdialects) In standard language, shvapanye is only somewhat present, as described above. Elkanye () and vekanye () is the hypercorrect way of pronouncing words, without shvapanye.
Slekanye Slekanye () is a phenomenon mostly limited to slovenized Germans, which live in around
Rut (
Bača subdialect) and is the merge of alveolar and post-alveolar fricatives and affricates into one phoneme, which is pronounced somewhere in between (, and for and , and , and and , respectively). Apart from that area, it is also known for a part of the Torre Valley dialect.
tl/dl–t/d distinction Proto-Slavic consonant clusters *tl and *dl simplified quite soon in central, southern and eastern areas while it disappeared later from western and northern dialects. Today, the only dialect that still retains this distinction is the
Gail Valley dialect. The clusters
tl and
dl that are nowadays present in the standard language became such after the omission of *ь/*ъ between the consonants. The distinction can be seen in the word
vile (Gail Valley dialect without any other dialectal changes) (all other dialects).
Consonant changes The pronunciation of a consonant can be influenced by its surroundings, which is not necessarily reflected in the orthography.
First Slavic palatalization The
first Slavic palatalization in modern Slovene exists only for , , , and , which turn into , , , and , respectively:
Second Slavic palatalization The
second Slavic palatalization in today's Slovene exists only for and , which turn into and , respectively: while and would be hardly ever used allophones of and , respectively. Consonant clusters in non-assimilated words can be excluded from this rule, for example
podcast 'podcast'. When a dental/alevolar fricative or affricate are followed by a postalveolar fricative, affricate or //, they usually become postalveolar; e.g.,
stric Žan 'uncle, whose name is Žan' or or .
Gemination of consonants Several consonant clusters also get simplified into geminated consonants. In fast speech, however, they change into usual, non-geminated consonants. • When two or (rarely) more of the same consonants are pronounced one after another, they become geminated, taking the allophone of the first one; e.g.,
brezzob 'toothless' . Stops and affricates can be geminated or pronounced separately; e.g.,
oddati 'to hand in' or . Labialized consonants can also lose labialization after ; e.g.,
siv vzorec 'gray pattern' or (of course
vzorec can also be acute). • When a dental/alveolar stop is followed by a dental/alveolar affricate, then they can be pronounced separately or combine into a geminated affricate; e.g.,
od čebele 'from a bee' or . • When a dental/alveolar stop or affricate is followed by a dental/alveolar fricative, they combine into a geminated affricate or are pronounced separately; e.g.,
podse 'under itself' or . == Vowels ==