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Plosive

In phonetics, a plosive, also known as an occlusive or simply a stop, is a pulmonic consonant in which the vocal tract is blocked so that all airflow ceases.

The occlusion may be made with the tongue tip or blade ([t], [d]), tongue body ([k], [ɡ]), lips ([p], [b]), or glottis ([ʔ]). Plosives contrast with nasals, where the vocal tract is blocked but airflow continues through the nose, as in /m/ and /n/, and with fricatives, where partial occlusion impedes but does not block airflow in the vocal tract.

Terminology

The terms stop, occlusive, and plosive are often used interchangeably. Linguists who distinguish them may not agree on the distinction being made. The terms refer to different features of the consonant. "Stop" refers to the airflow that is stopped. "Occlusive" refers to the articulation, which occludes (blocks) the vocal tract. "Plosive" refers to the release burst (plosion) of the consonant. Some object to the use of "plosive" for inaudibly released stops, which may then instead be called "applosives". The International Phonetic Association and the International Clinical Phonetics and Linguistics Association use the term "plosive".

Either "occlusive" or "stop" may be used as a general term covering the other together with nasals. That is, 'occlusive' may be defined as oral occlusive (plosives and affricates) plus nasal occlusives (nasals such as [m], [n]), or 'stop' may be defined as oral stops (plosives) plus nasal stops (nasals). Ladefoged and Maddieson (1996) prefer to restrict 'stop' to oral non-affricated occlusives. They say,

what we call simply nasals are called nasal stops by some linguists. We avoid this phrase, preferring to reserve the term 'stop' for sounds in which there is a complete interruption of airflow.[1]

In addition, they restrict "plosive" for a pulmonic consonants; "stops" in their usage include ejective and implosive consonants.[2]

If a term such as "plosive" is used for oral non-affricated obstruents, and nasals are not called nasal stops, then a stop may mean the glottal stop; "plosive" may even mean non-glottal stop. In other cases, however, it may be the word "plosive" that is restricted to the glottal stop. Generally speaking, plosives do not have plosion (a release burst). In English, for example, there are plosives with no audible release, such as the /p/ in apt. However, English plosives do have plosion in other environments.

In Ancient Greek, the term for plosive was ἄφωνον (áphōnon),[3] which means "unpronounceable", "voiceless", or "silent", because plosives could not be pronounced without a vowel. This term was calqued into Latin as mūta, and from there borrowed into English as mute.[4] Mute was sometimes used instead for voiceless consonants, whether plosives or fricatives, a usage that was later replaced with surd, from Latin surdus "deaf" or "silent",[5] a term still occasionally seen in the literature.[6] For more information on the Ancient Greek terms, see Ancient Greek phonology § Terminology.

Articulation

A plosive is typically analysed as having up to three phases:

  • Approach, during which articulators come together
  • Hold (or "occlusion" or "closure"), during which the articulators are held and block the airstream
  • Release (or "burst" or "plosion"), when the articulators are separated, releasing the compressed air[7]

Only the hold phase is requisite. A plosive may lack an approach when it is preceded by a consonant that involves an occlusion at the same place of articulation, as in [d] in end or old. In many languages, such as Malay and Vietnamese, word-final plosives lack a release burst, even when followed by a vowel, or have a nasal release. See no audible release.

Nasal occlusives are somewhat similar. In the catch and hold, airflow continues through the nose; in the release, there is no burst, and final nasals are typically unreleased across most languages.

In affricates, the catch and hold are those of a plosive, but the release is that of a fricative. That is, affricates are plosive–fricative contours.

Common plosives

All spoken natural languages in the world have plosives,[8] and most have at least the voiceless plosives [p], [t], and [k]. However, there are exceptions: Colloquial Samoan lacks the coronal [t], and several North American languages, such as the northern Iroquoian and southern Iroquoian languages (i.e., Cherokee), and Arabic lack the labial [p]. In fact, the labial is the least stable of the voiceless plosives in the languages of the world, as the unconditioned sound change [p][f] (→ [h] → Ø) is quite common in unrelated languages, having occurred in the history of Classical Japanese, Classical Arabic, and Proto-Celtic, for instance. Formal Samoan has only one word with velar [k]; colloquial Samoan conflates /t/ and /k/ to /k/. Ni‘ihau Hawaiian has [t] for /k/ to a greater extent than Standard Hawaiian, but neither distinguish a /k/ from a /t/. It may be more accurate to say that Hawaiian and colloquial Samoan do not distinguish velar and coronal plosives than to say they lack one or the other. Ontena Gadsup has only 1 phonemic plosive /ʔ/.[9][10] Yanyuwa distinguishes plosives in 7 places of articulations /b d̪ d ḏ ɖ ɡ̟ ɡ̠/ (it does not have voiceless plosives) which is the most out of all languages. [11]

See Common occlusives for the distribution of both plosives and nasals.

Classification

Voice

Voiced plosives are pronounced with vibration of the vocal cords, voiceless plosives without. Plosives are commonly voiceless, and many languages, such as Mandarin Chinese and Hawaiian, have only voiceless plosives. Others, such as most Australian languages, are indeterminate: plosives may vary between voiced and voiceless without distinction, some of them like Yanyuwa and Yidiny have only voiced plosives.

Aspiration

In aspirated plosives, the vocal cords (vocal folds) are abducted at the time of release. In a prevocalic aspirated plosive (a plosive followed by a vowel or sonorant), the time when the vocal cords begin to vibrate will be delayed until the vocal folds come together enough for voicing to begin, and will usually start with breathy voicing. The duration between the release of the plosive and the voice onset is called the voice onset time (VOT) or the aspiration interval. Highly aspirated plosives have a long period of aspiration, so that there is a long period of voiceless airflow (a phonetic [h]) before the onset of the vowel. In tenuis plosives, the vocal cords come together for voicing immediately following the release, and there is little or no aspiration (a voice onset time close to zero). In English, there may be a brief segment of breathy voice that identifies the plosive as voiceless and not voiced. In voiced plosives, the vocal folds are set for voice before the release, and often vibrate during the entire hold, and in English, the voicing after release is not breathy. A plosive is called "fully voiced" if it is voiced during the entire occlusion. In English, however, initial voiced plosives like /#b/ or /#d/ may have no voicing during the period of occlusion, or the voicing may start shortly before the release and continue after release, and word-final plosives tend to be fully devoiced: In most dialects of English, the final /b/, /d/ and /g/ in words like rib, mad and dog are fully devoiced.[12] Initial voiceless plosives, like the p in pie, are aspirated, with a palpable puff of air upon release, whereas a plosive after an s, as in spy, is tenuis (unaspirated). When spoken near a candle flame, the flame will flicker more after the words par, tar, and car are articulated, compared with spar, star, and scar. In the common pronunciation of papa, the initial p is aspirated whereas the medial p is not.

Length

In a geminate or long consonant, the occlusion lasts longer than in simple consonants. In languages where plosives are only distinguished by length (e.g., Arabic, Ilwana, Icelandic), the long plosives may be held up to three times as long as the short plosives. Italian is well known for its geminate plosives, as the double t in the name Vittoria takes just as long to say as the ct does in English Victoria. Japanese also prominently features geminate consonants, such as in the minimal pair 来た kita 'came' and 切った kitta 'cut'.

Note that there are many languages where the features voice, aspiration, and length reinforce each other, and in such cases it may be hard to determine which of these features predominates. In such cases, the terms fortis is sometimes used for aspiration or gemination, whereas lenis is used for single, tenuous, or voiced plosives. Be aware, however, that the terms fortis and lenis are poorly defined, and their meanings vary from source to source.

Nasalization

Simple nasals are differentiated from plosives only by a lowered velum that allows the air to escape through the nose during the occlusion. Nasals are acoustically sonorants, as they have a non-turbulent airflow and are nearly always voiced, but they are articulatorily obstruents, as there is complete blockage of the oral cavity. The term occlusive may be used as a cover term for both nasals and plosives.

A prenasalized stop starts out with a lowered velum that raises during the occlusion. The closest examples in English are consonant clusters such as the [nd] in candy, but many languages have prenasalized stops that function phonologically as single consonants. Swahili is well known for having words beginning with prenasalized stops, as in ndege 'bird', and in many languages of the South Pacific, such as Fijian, these are even spelled with single letters: b [mb], d [nd].

A postnasalized plosive begins with a raised velum that lowers during the occlusion. This causes an audible nasal release, as in English sudden. This could also be compared to the /dn/ cluster found in Russian and other Slavic languages, which can be seen in the name of the Dnieper River.

Note that the terms prenasalization and postnasalization are normally used only in languages where these sounds are phonemic: that is, not analyzed into sequences of plosive plus nasal.

Airstream mechanism

Stops may be made with more than one airstream mechanism. The normal mechanism is pulmonic egressive, that is, with air flowing outward from the lungs. All languages have pulmonic stops. Some languages have stops made with other mechanisms as well: ejective stops (glottalic egressive), implosive stops (glottalic ingressive), or click consonants (lingual ingressive).

Tenseness

A fortis plosive is produced with more muscular tension than a lenis plosive. However, this is difficult to measure, and there is usually debate over the actual mechanism of alleged fortis or lenis consonants.

There are a series of plosives in the Korean language, sometimes written with the IPA symbol for ejectives, which are produced using "stiff voice", meaning there is increased contraction of the glottis than for normal production of voiceless plosives. The indirect evidence for stiff voice is in the following vowels, which have a higher fundamental frequency than those following other plosives. The higher frequency is explained as a result of the glottis being tense. Other such phonation types include breathy voice, or murmur; slack voice; and creaky voice.

Transcription

The following plosives have been given dedicated symbols in the IPA.

English

[p t k] voiceless,
aspirated word-initially, tenuis in clusters after s, word-final often with no audible release
[b d ɡ] unaspirated,
partially voiced word-initially, fully voiced intervocalically, fully devoiced when word-final
[ʔ] glottal stop, not as a phoneme in most dialects

Variations

Many subclassifications of plosives are transcribed by adding a diacritic or modifier letter to the IPA symbols above.

Phonation and voice-onset time
t voiceless d voiced
tenuis aspirated
breathy-voiced
Airstream mechanism
t d pulmonic egressive
ejective ɗ implosive
! click
Nasality
ⁿd prenasalized dⁿ nasally released
lenis:
d⟩ with voicelessness diacritic
tense tt dd
tː dː
geminate

See also

References

  1. ^ Ladefoged, Peter; Maddieson, Ian (1996). The Sounds of the World's Languages. Oxford: Blackwell. p. 102. ISBN 978-0-631-19815-4.
  2. ^ Ladefoged, Peter; Maddieson, Ian (1996). The Sounds of the World's Languages. Oxford: Blackwell. pp. 77–78. ISBN 978-0-631-19815-4.
  3. ^ ἄφωνος. Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; A Greek–English Lexicon at the Perseus Project
  4. ^ "mute". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  5. ^ surdus. Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short. A Latin Dictionary on Perseus Project.
  6. ^ "surd". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  7. ^ Collins, Beverly; Mees, Inger M. (2013). Practical Phonetics and Phonology: A Resource Book for Students (3rd ed.). Routledge. pp. 85–6. ISBN 978-0-415-50650-2.
  8. ^ König, W. (ed) dtv Atlas zur deutschen Sprache dtv 1994[full citation needed]
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 2022-02-19. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  10. ^ (PDF) . Archived from the original (PDF) on 2022-03-08. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  11. ^ "Yanuyuwa".
  12. ^ Cruttenden, Alan Gimsons Pronunciation of English.[full citation needed]

Further reading

External links

  • Rothenberg M. "The Breath-Stream Dynamics of Simple-Released Plosive Production". Vol. 6. Bibliotheca Phonetica, Karger, Basel, 1968

plosive, stop, consonant, redirects, here, broader, definition, occlusive, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, so. Stop consonant redirects here For the broader definition see Occlusive This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Plosive news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article contains phonetic transcriptions in the International Phonetic Alphabet IPA For an introductory guide on IPA symbols see Help IPA For the distinction between and see IPA Brackets and transcription delimiters In phonetics a plosive also known as an occlusive or simply a stop is a pulmonic consonant in which the vocal tract is blocked so that all airflow ceases The occlusion may be made with the tongue tip or blade t d tongue body k ɡ lips p b or glottis ʔ Plosives contrast with nasals where the vocal tract is blocked but airflow continues through the nose as in m and n and with fricatives where partial occlusion impedes but does not block airflow in the vocal tract Contents 1 Terminology 2 Articulation 3 Common plosives 4 Classification 4 1 Voice 4 2 Aspiration 4 3 Length 4 4 Nasalization 4 5 Airstream mechanism 4 6 Tenseness 5 Transcription 5 1 English 5 2 Variations 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksTerminology EditThe terms stop occlusive and plosive are often used interchangeably Linguists who distinguish them may not agree on the distinction being made The terms refer to different features of the consonant Stop refers to the airflow that is stopped Occlusive refers to the articulation which occludes blocks the vocal tract Plosive refers to the release burst plosion of the consonant Some object to the use of plosive for inaudibly released stops which may then instead be called applosives The International Phonetic Association and the International Clinical Phonetics and Linguistics Association use the term plosive Either occlusive or stop may be used as a general term covering the other together with nasals That is occlusive may be defined as oral occlusive plosives and affricates plus nasal occlusives nasals such as m n or stop may be defined as oral stops plosives plus nasal stops nasals Ladefoged and Maddieson 1996 prefer to restrict stop to oral non affricated occlusives They say what we call simply nasals are called nasal stops by some linguists We avoid this phrase preferring to reserve the term stop for sounds in which there is a complete interruption of airflow 1 In addition they restrict plosive for a pulmonic consonants stops in their usage include ejective and implosive consonants 2 If a term such as plosive is used for oral non affricated obstruents and nasals are not called nasal stops then a stop may mean the glottal stop plosive may even mean non glottal stop In other cases however it may be the word plosive that is restricted to the glottal stop Generally speaking plosives do not have plosion a release burst In English for example there are plosives with no audible release such as the p in apt However English plosives do have plosion in other environments In Ancient Greek the term for plosive was ἄfwnon aphōnon 3 which means unpronounceable voiceless or silent because plosives could not be pronounced without a vowel This term was calqued into Latin as muta and from there borrowed into English as mute 4 Mute was sometimes used instead for voiceless consonants whether plosives or fricatives a usage that was later replaced with surd from Latin surdus deaf or silent 5 a term still occasionally seen in the literature 6 For more information on the Ancient Greek terms see Ancient Greek phonology Terminology Articulation EditA plosive is typically analysed as having up to three phases Approach during which articulators come together Hold or occlusion or closure during which the articulators are held and block the airstream Release or burst or plosion when the articulators are separated releasing the compressed air 7 Only the hold phase is requisite A plosive may lack an approach when it is preceded by a consonant that involves an occlusion at the same place of articulation as in d in end or old In many languages such as Malay and Vietnamese word final plosives lack a release burst even when followed by a vowel or have a nasal release See no audible release Nasal occlusives are somewhat similar In the catch and hold airflow continues through the nose in the release there is no burst and final nasals are typically unreleased across most languages In affricates the catch and hold are those of a plosive but the release is that of a fricative That is affricates are plosive fricative contours Common plosives EditAll spoken natural languages in the world have plosives 8 and most have at least the voiceless plosives p t and k However there are exceptions Colloquial Samoan lacks the coronal t and several North American languages such as the northern Iroquoian and southern Iroquoian languages i e Cherokee and Arabic lack the labial p In fact the labial is the least stable of the voiceless plosives in the languages of the world as the unconditioned sound change p f h O is quite common in unrelated languages having occurred in the history of Classical Japanese Classical Arabic and Proto Celtic for instance Formal Samoan has only one word with velar k colloquial Samoan conflates t and k to k Ni ihau Hawaiian has t for k to a greater extent than Standard Hawaiian but neither distinguish a k from a t It may be more accurate to say that Hawaiian and colloquial Samoan do not distinguish velar and coronal plosives than to say they lack one or the other Ontena Gadsup has only 1 phonemic plosive ʔ 9 10 Yanyuwa distinguishes plosives in 7 places of articulations b d d ḏ ɖ ɡ ɡ it does not have voiceless plosives which is the most out of all languages 11 See Common occlusives for the distribution of both plosives and nasals Classification EditVoice Edit Voiced plosives are pronounced with vibration of the vocal cords voiceless plosives without Plosives are commonly voiceless and many languages such as Mandarin Chinese and Hawaiian have only voiceless plosives Others such as most Australian languages are indeterminate plosives may vary between voiced and voiceless without distinction some of them like Yanyuwa and Yidiny have only voiced plosives Aspiration Edit In aspirated plosives the vocal cords vocal folds are abducted at the time of release In a prevocalic aspirated plosive a plosive followed by a vowel or sonorant the time when the vocal cords begin to vibrate will be delayed until the vocal folds come together enough for voicing to begin and will usually start with breathy voicing The duration between the release of the plosive and the voice onset is called the voice onset time VOT or the aspiration interval Highly aspirated plosives have a long period of aspiration so that there is a long period of voiceless airflow a phonetic h before the onset of the vowel In tenuis plosives the vocal cords come together for voicing immediately following the release and there is little or no aspiration a voice onset time close to zero In English there may be a brief segment of breathy voice that identifies the plosive as voiceless and not voiced In voiced plosives the vocal folds are set for voice before the release and often vibrate during the entire hold and in English the voicing after release is not breathy A plosive is called fully voiced if it is voiced during the entire occlusion In English however initial voiced plosives like b or d may have no voicing during the period of occlusion or the voicing may start shortly before the release and continue after release and word final plosives tend to be fully devoiced In most dialects of English the final b d and g in words like rib mad and dog are fully devoiced 12 Initial voiceless plosives like the p in pie are aspirated with a palpable puff of air upon release whereas a plosive after an s as in spy is tenuis unaspirated When spoken near a candle flame the flame will flicker more after the words par tar and car are articulated compared with spar star and scar In the common pronunciation of papa the initial p is aspirated whereas the medial p is not Length Edit In a geminate or long consonant the occlusion lasts longer than in simple consonants In languages where plosives are only distinguished by length e g Arabic Ilwana Icelandic the long plosives may be held up to three times as long as the short plosives Italian is well known for its geminate plosives as the double t in the name Vittoria takes just as long to say as the ct does in English Victoria Japanese also prominently features geminate consonants such as in the minimal pair 来た kita came and 切った kitta cut Note that there are many languages where the features voice aspiration and length reinforce each other and in such cases it may be hard to determine which of these features predominates In such cases the terms fortis is sometimes used for aspiration or gemination whereas lenis is used for single tenuous or voiced plosives Be aware however that the terms fortis and lenis are poorly defined and their meanings vary from source to source Nasalization Edit Further information Nasal consonant and Nasalization Simple nasals are differentiated from plosives only by a lowered velum that allows the air to escape through the nose during the occlusion Nasals are acoustically sonorants as they have a non turbulent airflow and are nearly always voiced but they are articulatorily obstruents as there is complete blockage of the oral cavity The term occlusive may be used as a cover term for both nasals and plosives A prenasalized stop starts out with a lowered velum that raises during the occlusion The closest examples in English are consonant clusters such as the nd in candy but many languages have prenasalized stops that function phonologically as single consonants Swahili is well known for having words beginning with prenasalized stops as in ndege bird and in many languages of the South Pacific such as Fijian these are even spelled with single letters b mb d nd A postnasalized plosive begins with a raised velum that lowers during the occlusion This causes an audible nasal release as in English sudden This could also be compared to the dn cluster found in Russian and other Slavic languages which can be seen in the name of the Dnieper River Note that the terms prenasalization and postnasalization are normally used only in languages where these sounds are phonemic that is not analyzed into sequences of plosive plus nasal Airstream mechanism Edit Stops may be made with more than one airstream mechanism The normal mechanism is pulmonic egressive that is with air flowing outward from the lungs All languages have pulmonic stops Some languages have stops made with other mechanisms as well ejective stops glottalic egressive implosive stops glottalic ingressive or click consonants lingual ingressive Tenseness Edit Further information Tenseness A fortis plosive is produced with more muscular tension than a lenis plosive However this is difficult to measure and there is usually debate over the actual mechanism of alleged fortis or lenis consonants There are a series of plosives in the Korean language sometimes written with the IPA symbol for ejectives which are produced using stiff voice meaning there is increased contraction of the glottis than for normal production of voiceless plosives The indirect evidence for stiff voice is in the following vowels which have a higher fundamental frequency than those following other plosives The higher frequency is explained as a result of the glottis being tense Other such phonation types include breathy voice or murmur slack voice and creaky voice Transcription EditThe following plosives have been given dedicated symbols in the IPA Symbols for plosive consonants p voiceless bilabial plosive b voiced bilabial plosive t voiceless alveolar plosive d voiced alveolar plosive ʈ voiceless retroflex plosive ɖ voiced retroflex plosive c voiceless palatal plosive ɟ voiced palatal plosive k voiceless velar plosive ɡ voiced velar plosive q voiceless uvular plosive ɢ voiced uvular plosive ʡ epiglottal plosive ʔ glottal stopEnglish Edit p t k voiceless aspirated word initially tenuis in clusters after s word final often with no audible release b d ɡ unaspirated partially voiced word initially fully voiced intervocalically fully devoiced when word final ʔ glottal stop not as a phoneme in most dialectsVariations Edit Many subclassifications of plosives are transcribed by adding a diacritic or modifier letter to the IPA symbols above Phonation and voice onset time t voiceless d voiced t tenuis tʰ aspirated dʱ breathy voicedAirstream mechanism t d pulmonic egressive tʼ ejective ɗ implosive clickNasality ⁿd prenasalized dⁿ nasally released d lenis d with voicelessness diacritic t tense tt dd tː dː geminateSee also EditContinuant the opposite of a stop List of phonetics topics Pop filter Nonexplosive stopReferences Edit Ladefoged Peter Maddieson Ian 1996 The Sounds of the World s Languages Oxford Blackwell p 102 ISBN 978 0 631 19815 4 Ladefoged Peter Maddieson Ian 1996 The Sounds of the World s Languages Oxford Blackwell pp 77 78 ISBN 978 0 631 19815 4 ἄfwnos Liddell Henry George Scott Robert A Greek English Lexicon at the Perseus Project mute Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required surdus Charlton T Lewis and Charles Short A Latin Dictionary on Perseus Project surd Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required Collins Beverly Mees Inger M 2013 Practical Phonetics and Phonology A Resource Book for Students 3rd ed Routledge pp 85 6 ISBN 978 0 415 50650 2 Konig W ed dtv Atlas zur deutschen Sprache dtv 1994 full citation needed https web archive org web 20220219205744 https halshs archives ouvertes fr halshs 01728030 document Archived from the original on 2022 02 19 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help PDF https web archive org web 20220308155324 https www sil org system files reapdata 14 55 28 145528924996124292827377513229587788840 Gadsup Ontena pdf Archived from the original PDF on 2022 03 08 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Yanuyuwa Cruttenden Alan Gimsons Pronunciation of English full citation needed Further reading EditIan Maddieson Patterns of Sounds Cambridge University Press 1984 ISBN 0 521 26536 3External links EditRothenberg M The Breath Stream Dynamics of Simple Released Plosive Production Vol 6 Bibliotheca Phonetica Karger Basel 1968 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Plosive amp oldid 1135723495, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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