- Guttural
Guttural is a term used to describe any of several speech sounds whose primary
place of articulation is near the back of the oral cavity. In some definitions this is restricted topharyngeal consonant s, but in others includes some but not all velar anduvular consonant s. It is often used solely forconsonant s, but may also be used forvowel s with articulation in the throat.Usage of the term
The word "guttural" literally means 'of the throat', and is derived from the
Latin word forthroat . In colloquial usage, the term is used for any sound pronounced in the throat or near the back of the mouth that is considered "harsh". TheOED says,:"By non-phoneticians any mode of pronunciation which is harsh or grating in effect is often supposed to be 'guttural'; with this notion the designation is popularly applied by Englishmen to the German "ch," but not to "k" or "g," though technically it belongs equally to them. [That is, they are all pronounced at the same location in the mouth.] As a technical term of phonetics, the word was first used to denote the Hebrew spirant consonants ע ,ח ,ה ,א [that is, glottal IPA|/h/ and IPA|/ʔ/, uvular IPA|/χ/, and pharyngeal IPA|/ʕ/] ; it is now commonly applied (inaccurately, if its etymological sense be regarded) to the sounds formed by the back of the tongue and the palate, as (k, g, x, ɣ, ŋ) [the velars] ."
Phonologists such as Miller (2005) and Pullum & Ladusaw restrict the term guttural to sounds articulated in the throat, which include pharyngeal, epiglottal, and glottal consonants (see
radical consonant ), and murmured, pharyngealized, and glottalized vowels (seestrident vowel ). The Tuu and Juu (Khoisan) languages of southern Africa have large numbers of guttural vowels. These sounds share certain phonological behaviors which warrant the use of a term specifically for them.Popular conceptions of guttural consonants
English speakers are not commonly exposed to guttural howels, so popular impressions focus on guttural consonants. Gutturals are seen as those sounds pronounced in the back of the vocal tract that do not occur in English, and which are perceived as harsh. Therefore velar stops such as IPA|/g/, IPA|/k/, and IPA|/ŋ/ are not considered guttural, but velar fricatives and affricates such as IPA|/x/, IPA|/ɣ/, and IPA|/kx’/ are; the glottal consonants IPA|/h/ and IPA|/ʔ/ are not considered guttural, but epiglottal IPA|/ʜ/ and IPA|/ʡ/ are. German has IPA|/x/, and Arabic has several of these sounds, so these languages are often described as guttural.
Historically Hebrew also had guttural consonants, but except for the
guttural R , these were not found in most European dialects of Hebrew. In modernIsrael , the guttural pronunciations ofMizrahi Jews were stigmatized by theAshkenazi cultural elite for decades. Today, the most common pronunciation ofIsraeli Hebrew has no guttural consonants except for variants of IPA|/r/ and sometimes IPA|/χ/ or IPA|/ħ/, but traditional Mizrahi pronunciations, which include the full historical range of guttural consonants, are still used in music and poetry.A guttural style of singing is very popular within extreme metal (Black, Death, Doom & sometimes Thrash Metal) music, as its aggressive sound arguably complements the music.
o-called guttural languages
In the popular consciousness, some
language s are considered to be guttural languages, as opposed to just possessing some sounds which are pronounced at the back of the oral cavity. Often, this is just a result of the beliefs of Anglophones or of non-speakers of those languages. Some languages which have fallen under the popular meaning of "guttural", as opposed to the technical meaning, are German, Ubykh, and Arabic.French, Arabic, Welsh, Armenian, Hebrew, Scots, and also partly German, Dutch, Afrikaans, Portuguese, Somali, Yiddish all contain sounds that come from the back of the throat as well as some
Northern English dialects. Sometimes whether a language is considered guttural or not could depend on differences within regions and countries. In French, the only truly guttural sound is auvular trill ; Arabic and Hebrew both contain rather more gutturals, including velar, uvular and pharyngeal fricatives.ee also
*
Guttural R
*Death grunt References
*Miller, Amanda (2005), "Guttural vowels and guttural co-articulation in Ju|’hoansi". "Journal of Phonetics," vol. 35, Issue 1, January 2007, pp 56-84.
*Geoffrey K. Pullum and William Ladusaw, "Phonetic Symbol Guide," Second edition, page 272.
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