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Creaky-voiced glottal approximant

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Creaky-voiced glottal approximant
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A creaky-voiced glottal approximant is a consonant sound in some languages. It involves tension in the glottis and diminution of airflow, compared to surrounding vowels, but not full occlusion. It is a common phonetic realization of a glottal stop, especially intervocalically, but is only rarely contrastive except when gemination is involved.

One source has used the transcription ⟨ʔ̬⟩,[1] and another has used ⟨ʔ̰⟩;[2] however, both sources quote Ladefoged & Maddieson (1996:76–77), who only use the IPA wildcard ⟨*⟩ in their transcription.

Features

Features of a creaky-voiced glottal approximant:

Occurrence

It is an intervocalic allophone of a glottal stop in many languages; in languages with gemination, it may only be a stop intervocalically when geminate.[3]

Language Word IPA Meaning Notes
Gimi hagok /ha*oʔ/ 'many' The voiced equivalent of a glottal stop /ʔ/; /*/ and /ʔ/ correspond to /ɡ/ and /k/ in neighboring languages.[4] One source analyses the pair instead as /ʔ/ and /ʔː/.[5]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Garellek, Marc; Chai, Yuan; Huang, Yaqian; Van Doren, Maxine (2023). "Voicing of glottal consonants and non-modal vowels". Journal of the International Phonetic Association. 53 (2): 305–332. doi:10.1017/S0025100321000116.
  2. ^ Kehrein, Wolfgang; Golston, Chris (2005). "A prosodic theory of laryngeal contrasts". Phonology. 21 (3): 325–357. doi:10.1017/S0952675704000302. JSTOR 4615515. S2CID 62734231.
  3. ^ Ladefoged & Maddieson (1996), pp. 75–77.
  4. ^ Ladefoged & Maddieson (1996), pp. 76–78.
  5. ^ Gimi Organised Phonology Data. [Manuscript] [1]

References