For example, in the word schilling, the trigraph sch represents the voiceless postalveolar fricative /ʃ/, rather than the consonant cluster /sx/.
The combination gli in Italian can also be a trigraph, representing the palatal lateral approximant /ʎ/ before vowels other than i, as in aglio, pronounced [ˈaʎʎo].
The orthography used for the Yiddish language by YIVO uses the Hebrew script trigraph דזש (dalet, zayin, shin) to refer to /dʒ/.
There is also a single obsolete consonant trigraph, ㅹ[β], a theoretical form not actually found in any texts.
Because these letters are created to transcribe consonants of Mandarin (late imperial lingua franca), these are disappeared soon.
Japanese kana use trigraphs for (C)yō sequences, as in きょう kyou /kjoo/ ("today"); the う is only pronounced /o/ after another /o/.