- Glottalization
Glottalization is the complete or partial closure of the
glottis during the articulation of another sound. Glottalization ofvowel s andvoiced consonant s is most often realized ascreaky voice (partial closure). Glottalization of voiceless consonants usually involves complete closure of theglottis ; another way to describe this phenomenon is to say that aglottal stop is made simultaneously with anotherconsonant . In certain cases, the glottal stop can even wholly replace the voiceless consonant.There are two other ways to represent glottalization in the IPA: (a) the same way as ejectives, with an apostrophe; or (b) with the under-tilde for creaky voice. For example, the Yapese word for "sick" with a glottalized "m" could be transcribed as either IPA| [m’aar] or IPA| [m̰aar] . (In some typefaces, the apostrophe will occur above the m.)
Glottal replacement
When a phoneme is completely substituted by a glottal stop IPA| [ʔ] , one speaks of glottaling or glottal replacement. This is, for instance, very common in
Cockney andEstuary English . In these dialects, the glottal stop is an allophone of IPA|/p/, IPA|/t/, and IPA|/k/ word-finally and when preceded by a stressed vowel and followed by an unstressed vowel (this also includes syllabic IPA|/l/ IPA|/m/ and IPA|/n/) [Harv|Sullivan|1992|p=46] . E.g "city" IPA| [ˈsɪʔɪ] , "bottle" IPA| [ˈbɒʔəɫ] , "Britain" IPA| [ˈbɹɪʔən] , "seniority" IPA| [siːniˈɒɹəʔi] . This also occurs in Indonesian, where syllable final /k/ is pronounced as a glottal stop.In Hawaiian, the
glottal stop is reconstructed to have come from other Proto-Polynesian consonants. The following table displays the shift IPA|/k/ → IPA|/ʔ/ as well as the shift IPA|/t/ → IPA|/k/Glottal replacement is not purely a feature of consonants. Yanesha' has three vowel qualities (IPA|/a/, IPA|/e/, andIPA|/o/) contrasts them phonemically between short, long, and "laryngeal" or glottalized forms. While the latter generally consists of creaky phonation, there is some allophony involved. In In pre-final contexts, a variation occurs (especially before voiced consonants) ranging from creaky phonation throughout the vowel to a sequence of a vowel,
glottal stop , and a slightly rearticulated vowel: IPA|/maˀˈnʲoʐ/ ('deer') → IPA| [maʔa̯ˈnʲoʂ] [Harv|Fast|1953|p=192] .Glottal reinforcement
When a phoneme is accompanied (either sequentially or simultaneously) by a IPA| [ʔ] , then one speaks of pre-glottalization or glottal reinforcement. This is very common in all varieties of English, RP included; IPA|/t/ is the most affected but IPA|/p/, IPA|/k/, and even occasionally IPA|/tʃ/ [Harv|Roach|1973|p=10] are also affected. In the English dialects exhibiting pre-glottalization, the consonants in question are usually glottalized in the coda position. E.g. "what" IPA| [ˈwɒʔt] , "fiction" IPA| [ˈfɪʔkʃən] , "milkman" IPA| [ˈmɪlʔkmæn] , "opera" IPA| [ˈɒʔpɹə] . To a certain extent, there is
free variation in English between glottal replacement and glottal reinforcement [Harv|Sullivan|1992|p=46] .ee also
*
Glottalic consonant
*Implosive consonant
*Ejective consonant
*T-glottalization References
Bibliography
Glottalization
*cite book|author=Andrésen, B.S.|year=1968|title=Pre-glottalization in English Standard Pronunciation|place=Oslo|publisher=Norwegian University Press|ISBN=
*cite journal|author=Christopherson, P.|year=1952|title=The glottal stop in English|journal=English Studies|volume=33|pages=156–163
*cite journal|author=Fast, Peter W.|year=1953|title=Amuesha (Arawak) Phonemes |journal=International Journal of American Linguistics|volume=19|pages=191–194|doi=10.1086/464218
*cite journal|author=Higginbottom, E.|year=1964|title=Glottal reinforcement in English|journal=Transactions of the Philological Society|volume=63|pages=129|doi=10.1111/j.1467-968X.1964.tb01010.x
*cite journal|author=O'Connor, J.D.|year=1952|title=RP and the reinforcing glottal stop|journal=English Studies|volume=33|pages=214–218
*cite journal|author=Roach, P.|year=1973|title=Glottalization of English IPA|/p/, IPA|/t/, IPA|/k/ and IPA|/tʃ/: a reexamination|journal=Journal of the International Phonetic Association|volume=3.1|pages=10–21
*cite book|author=Sullivan, A.E.|year=1992|title=Sound Change in Progress: a study of phonological change and lexical diffusion, with reference to glottalization and r-loss in the speech of some Exeter schoolchildren.|place=|publisher=Exeter University Press|ISBN=English accents
*cite book|author=Foulkes, P.|author2=Docherty, G.|year=1999|title=Urban Voices: accent studies in the British Isles.|place=London|publisher=Arnold|ISBN=
*cite book|author=Hughes, A.|author2=Trudgill, P.|year=2005|title=English Accents and Dialects|edition=fourth edition|place=London|publisher=Arnold|ISBN=
*cite book|author=Wells, J.C. |year=1982|title=Accents of English: volumes 1-3|place=Cambridge|publisher=Cambridge University Press|ISBN=External links
* [http://www.kortlandt.nl/publications/art211e.pdf] Kortlandt, Frederik. "Glottalization, Preaspiration and Gemination in English and Scandinavian". Doc PDF.
* [http://www.openaccess.leidenuniv.nl/dspace/bitstream/1887/1926/1/344_103.pdf] Kortland, Frederik. "How Old is the English Glottal Stop?". Doc PDF.
* [http://www-users.york.ac.uk/~pf11/Doch-etal-JLING.pdf] Docherty, G. et al. "Descriptive Adequacy in Phonology: a variationist perspective." Doc PDF.
* [http://www.ling.lancs.ac.uk/staff/kerswill/pkpubs/Kerswill2003DialectLevellDiffusion.pdf] Kerswill, P. "Dialect Levelling and Geographical Diffusion in British English". Doc PDF.
* [http://www.phon.ox.ac.uk/~joanna/sap36_jp.pdf] Przedlacka, J. "Estuary English and RP: Some Recent Findings." Doc PDF.
* [http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/estuary/home.htm] Wells, J.C. Site of the UCL (University College of London) Department of Phonetics and Linguistics. Web documents relating to Estuary English.
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