المرجع الالكتروني للمعلوماتية
المرجع الألكتروني للمعلوماتية

English Language
عدد المواضيع في هذا القسم 6142 موضوعاً
Grammar
Linguistics
Reading Comprehension

Untitled Document
أبحث عن شيء أخر المرجع الالكتروني للمعلوماتية
معنى قوله تعالى زين للناس حب الشهوات من النساء
2024-11-24
مسألتان في طلب المغفرة من الله
2024-11-24
من آداب التلاوة
2024-11-24
مواعيد زراعة الفجل
2024-11-24
أقسام الغنيمة
2024-11-24
سبب نزول قوله تعالى قل للذين كفروا ستغلبون وتحشرون الى جهنم
2024-11-24

أنواع بحوث الإعلان
4-7-2022
الخبز أرزىّ
9-7-2019
Fission
29-3-2017
استقطاب العازل dielectric polarization
7-8-2018
اكتشاف النيوترون
27-6-2016
اماطة الاذى والقذارة عن الطرقات
20-1-2016

Airstream mechanisms  
  
991   09:15 صباحاً   date: 25-7-2022
Author : Richard Ogden
Book or Source : An Introduction to English Phonetics
Page and Part : 154-10


Read More
Date: 3-6-2022 929
Date: 2023-05-12 734
Date: 2023-11-04 742

Glottalic and velaric airstreams

Airstream mechanisms

Airstream mechanism is the term we use to describe the means by which air is moved out of or into the vocal tract. So far, in almost all the sounds we have looked at, the airstream is pulmonic and egressive. Every spoken language uses this mechanism. There are two other important airstream mechanisms in the world’s languages, and it is possible to illustrate them from spoken English. They are:

velaric airstream, where there is a complete closure of the back of the tongue against the velum (sometimes uvula), with another closure somewhere forward of that, making a cavity between the two closures

glottalic airstream, where the glottis is closed and the larynx is raised to compress, or lowered to rarefy, air trapped between the glottal closure and a constriction higher up in the vocal tract

We will explore and illustrate these two airstreams with material from English.

While sounds that are made with the velaric and glottalic airstream mechanisms can be observed in English, very little is known about the uses to which these sounds are put, what their distribution in speech is, and who is likely to use them. This is an area for much further work. It is a challenging area, because velarically and glottalically initiated sounds are not easy to elicit from speakers (e.g. in eliciting word lists), but in many varieties of spoken English they are common in spontaneous, conversational speech.