Phonetics and Phonology (ENG)
VU respectively. Glottalization as a process is used for any articulation involving a simultaneous glottal constriction (e.g., a glottal stop.
In English, glottal stops are often used in this way to reinforce a voiceless plosive
at the end of a word as in what.
Such sounds, made
while the glottis is closed, are produced without the direct involvement of air from the lungs. Air is compressed in the mouth or pharynx
above the glottal closure, and released while the breath is still held thus the resultant sounds produced in this glottalic airstream mechanism are known as ejective sounds. They are also called ‘glottalic’ or glottalized sounds (though the latter term is often restricted to sounds where the glottal feature is a secondary articulation. In languages like Quechua and Hausa ejective consonants are used as phonemes. A further category of sounds involving a glottalic airstream mechanism is known as implosive.
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