Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-c4f8m Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-23T09:01:34.438Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Laryngeal-oral coarticulation in glottalized English plosives

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 February 2009

Peter J. Roach
Affiliation:
(University of Leeds)

Extract

It has been observed by many writers on English phonetics that /p/, /t/, /k/ and /tʃ/ are frequently glottalized, i.e. produced with closed glottis. This observation raises a variety of interesting questions. Firstly, the phonological environments in which glottalization occurs have yet to be satisfactorily described; a preliminary attempt at a re-statement was made in Roach (1973) and a fuller account presented in Roach (1978). Secondly, it is of interest to study the articulatory mechanisms used in the production of glottalization, both from the point of view of finding out more about how laryngeal closures in speech are produced, and also with respect to the temporal organization of the laryngeal and supralaryngeal closures. Thirdly, since the incidence of glottalization (and of the closely related phenomenon of glottal replacement) appears to vary according to geographical and social factors, age and sex, it is of interest in dialectological and sociolinguistic studies of English. Finally, in a wider context, glottalization may be studied as being potentially an on-going sound change in English, and as a phenomenon that might possibly be linked with similar laryngeal articulations in other languages, e.g. the stød of Standard Danish and of West Jutland Danish.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Journal of the International Phonetic Association 1979

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Andrésen, B. S. (1968). Pre-glottalization in English. Oslo: Norwegian Universities Press.Google Scholar
Christophersen, P. (1952). ‘The glottal stop in English’, English Studies, 33, 156–63.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fujimura, O., and Sawashima, M. (1971). ‘Consonant sequences and laryngeal control’, Annual Bulletin of Research Institute of Logopedics and Phoniatrics, Tokyo, 5, 16.Google Scholar
Gauffin, J. (1977). ‘Mechanisms of larynx tube constriction’, Phonetica, 34, 307–9.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Halle, M., and Stevens, K. N. (1971). ‘A note on laryngeal features’, Quarterly Progress Report, M.I.T. Research Lab. of Electronics, 101, 198213.Google Scholar
Hardcastle, W. J., and Roach, P. J. (1979): ‘An instrumental investigation of coarticulation in stop consonant sequences’, Current Issues in the Phonetic Sciences, eds. H. H., and Hollien, P., Amsterdam: John Benjamins B.V., 531–40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kim, C.-W. (1970). ‘A theory of aspiration’, Phonetica, 21, 107–16.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Liberman, A. S. (1972). ‘The glottal stop in English as viewed against its Germanic background’, Kalbotyra, 23.3, 4557.Google Scholar
Lindqvist-Gauffin, J. (1969). ‘Laryngeal mechanisms in Speech’, Quarterly Progress and Status Report, Speech Transmission, Lab., K.T.H., Stockholm, 2–3, 2632.Google Scholar
Lindqvist-Gauffin, J. (1972). ‘A descriptive model of laryngeal articulation in speech’, Quarterly Progress and Status Report, Speech Transmission Lab., K.T.H., Stockholm, 2–3, 19.Google Scholar
O'Connor, J. D. (1952). ‘RP and the reinforcing glottal stop’, English Studies, 33, 214–18.Google Scholar
Ringgaard, K. (1960). Vestjysk Stød, Universitetsforlaget i Aarhus.Google Scholar
Ringgaard, K. (1962). ‘The pronunciation of a glottal stop’, Phonetica, 8, 203–8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roach, P. J. (1973). ‘Glottalization of English /p/, /t/, /k/ and /tʃ/’, Journal of the International Phonetic Association, 3.1, 1021.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roach, P. J. (1977). ‘Notes on the processing of EPG data with a small computer’, Work in Progress, Reading University Phonetics Laboratory, 1. 1420.Google Scholar
Roach, P. J. (1978). An Experimental Study of Some Articulatory Characteristics of Glottalized English Consonants, University of Reading Ph.D. thesis.Google Scholar
Roach, P. J., and Brasington, R. W. (1978). ‘Recent developments in EPG software’, Work in Progress, Reading University Phonetics Laboratory, 2.Google Scholar
Roach, P. J., and Hardcastle, W. J. (1976). ‘A computer system for the processing of electropalatographic and other articulatory data’, Proceedings of Phonetics Symposium, University of Essex Language Centre Occasional Papers, 17.Google Scholar