-
develop in Cheyenne: "First, *n and *h drop and all
other consonants give
glottal catch before *k. *k then
drops except in element-final position. Next, there...
- and
Xhosa (though Zulu does not). They are
produced by
making a
glottal stop (the
catch in the
throat in the
middle of
English uh-oh!),
which stops the...
- of a true consonant, a
glottal stop ([ʔ]), the
sound found in the
catch in uh-oh. In Arabic, the alif
represents the
glottal stop
pronunciation when...
-
consonants were
marked by ⟨◌̤⟩: ⟨s̤, t̤, d̤⟩.
Consonants accompanied by a
glottal stop (ejectives) were
marked by ⟨ʼ⟩: ⟨kʼ, pʼ⟩.
Tense and lax
vowels were...
-
yodeling style is
created from a
vocal break in her
voice known as a "
glottal catch". "Not just
anybody can yodel. You have to have the
ability to have...
- (Hawaiian pronunciation: [ʔoˈkinɐ]) is the
letter that
transcribes the
glottal stop
consonant in Hawaiian. It does not have
distinct uppercase and lowercase...
- the
front or back of the oral
cavity such as: /p/, /w/, /m/, /n/, and
glottal stops.
Sound made in the
middle of the
mouth are
completely absent. Compensatory...
- the
glottal stop
found after consonants and
before vowels. This has been lost in
Standard Tagalog,
probably influenced by Spanish,
where the
glottal stop...
- but today, "k" is used as the
standard transliteration. The
voiceless glottal transition "h" is
distinct and
should always be
pronounced - for example...
- or [ʔəhəm], ("Attention!") may
contain a
glottal stop [ʔ] or a [ɦ] in any
dialect of English; the
glottal stop is
common in
American English, some British...