ʁ

/ʁ/

Voiced uvular fricative (Inverted small capital R)

Instructions:

Articulator: the back of the tongue

Point of Articulation: uvula

Manner of Articulation: Fricative: The articulator makes a narrow constriction against the point of articulation, so when the airflow goes through the oral passage, audible frication noise is created.

Voice: voiced – Vocal folds are close and vibrating.

Occurrence:
Abkhaz, Adyghe, Afrikaans (Parts of the former Cape Province), Aleut (Atkan dialect), Arabic (Modern Standard), Archi, Armenian (Eastern), Avar, Berber (Kabyle), Chilcotin, Danish (Standard), Dutch (Belgian Limburg, Central Netherlands, East Flanders, Northern Netherlands, Randstad, Southern Netherlands), English (Dyfed, Gwynedd, North-east Leinster, Northumbrian dialect, Sierra Leonean), French, German (Chemnitz dialect, Lower Rhine, Standard, Swabian), Hebrew, Inuktitut (East Inuktitut dialect), Kabardian, Kazakh, Kyrgyz, Lakota, Malay (Perak dialect), Norwegian (Southern dialects, Southwestern dialects), Portuguese (European, Setubalense, Fluminense, Sulista), Sakha, Swedish (Southern dialects), Tatar, Tsez, Ubykh, Yiddish, Zhuang.
(Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voiced_uvular_fricative#Occurrence)