Abstract

Variation in voicing is common among sounds of the world’s languages: sounds that are analyzed as voiceless can undergo voicing, and those analyzed as voiced can devoice. Among voiceless glottal sounds in particular, voicing is widespread: linguists often expect the voiceless glottal stop [ʔ] and fricative [h] to be fully voiced, especially between vowels. In this study, we use audio recordings from Illustrations of the International Phonetic Alphabet published in theJournal of the International Phonetic Associationto explore the extent to which glottal consonants and non-modal (breathy and creaky) vowels differ in terms of percentage voicing and voicing intensity in three phrasal positions. We find that voiceless [h] is only slightly less voiced than voiced [ɦ] in initial position. Between two vowels, both [h] and [ɦ] are as voiced as breathy vowels. Glottal stops and creaky vowels are both characterized by high percentages of voicing, but they differ in voicing intensity: in all phrasal positions, glottal stops generally have periods of strong and weak voicing, whereas creaky vowels are strongly voiced. In contrast, vowels described as ‘rearticulated’, ‘checked’, or ‘glottalized’ show similar drops in voicing intensity to glottal stops. We interpret these results through an articulatory lens: glottal consonants and non-modal vowels are both modulations in phonation resulting from laryngeal constriction and vocal fold spreading. We argue further that, because voicing during [ʔ] and [h] is largely predictable from respiratory and prosodic constraints, many cases of [ʔ] and [h] can be considered phonetically underspecified for voicing.

Highlights

  • For about as long as the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) has existed, phoneticians (e.g. Meyer 1900, Passy 1900) have acknowledged that glottal consonants show large variation in voicing

  • The IPA defines several sounds as ‘glottal’. There are those with a glottal place of articulation, meaning that the primary place of articulation for vocal tract constriction is at the glottis, or space between the vocal folds: the voiceless glottal stop [/] involves occlusion at the glottis, whereas the voiceless glottal fricative [h] and the voiced glottal fricative [ç] involve spreading

  • The results reveal another different pattern for glottal stops compared to glottal fricatives: in every position analyzed, glottal stops show a period of weaker voicing: initial prevocalic [/] begins voiceless or weakly voiced, but shows a gradual rise in voicing intensity throughout the glottalization; intervocalic [/] begins and ends with strong voicing, but the middle portion of the glottalization shows a marked drop in voicing intensity leading to full glottal occlusion; final post-vocalic [/] begins strongly voiced and ends with weaker voicing

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Summary

Introduction

For about as long as the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) has existed, phoneticians (e.g. Meyer 1900, Passy 1900) have acknowledged that glottal consonants show large variation in voicing. There are those with a glottal place of articulation, meaning that the primary place of articulation for vocal tract constriction is at the glottis, or space between the vocal folds: the voiceless glottal stop [/] involves occlusion at the glottis, whereas the voiceless glottal fricative [h] and the (breathy) voiced glottal fricative [ç] involve spreading. There are consonants whose primary place of articulation is supraglottal, but which secondarily involve the larynx; Ladefoged & Maddieson (1996: Section 3.1) refer to this secondary articulation as a sound’s ‘laryngeal setting’. Such sounds are generally called ‘aspirated’ (e.g. [tH]) if they have vocal fold spreading, or ‘glottalized’ if they have laryngeal constriction (e.g. [/Ét])

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