Preaspiration
In phonetics, preaspiration is a period of voicelessness or aspiration preceding the closure of a voiceless obstruent, basically equivalent to an -like sound preceding the obstruent. In other words, when an obstruent is preaspirated, the glottis is opened for some time before the obstruent closure. To mark preaspiration using the International Phonetic Alphabet, the diacritic for regular aspiration,, can be placed before the preaspirated consonant. However, prefer to use a simple cluster notation, e.g. instead of.
Typology
Preaspiration is comparatively uncommon across languages of the world, and is claimed by some to not be phonemically contrastive in any language.note that, at least in the case of Icelandic, preaspirated stops have a longer duration of aspiration than normally aspirated stops, comparable to clusters of +consonant in languages with such clusters. As a result, they view preaspiration as purely a distributional feature, indistinguishable phonetically and phonologically from clusters with, and prefer to notate preaspirated stops as clusters, e.g. Icelandic kappi "hero" rather than.
A distinction is often made between so-called normative and non-normative preaspiration: in a language with normative preaspiration of certain voiceless obstruents, the preaspiration is obligatory even though it is not a distinctive feature; in a language with non-normative preaspiration, the preaspiration can be phonetically structured for those who use it, but it is non-obligatory, and may not appear with all speakers. Preaspirated consonants are typically in free variation with spirant-stop clusters, though they may also have a relationship with long vowels or -stop clusters.
Preaspiration can take a number of different forms; while the most usual is glottal friction, the precise phonetic quality can be affected by the obstruent or the preceding vowel, becoming for example after close vowels; other potential realizations include, voiceless vowels, and even.
Preaspiration is very unstable both synchronically and diachronically and is often replaced by a fricative or by a lengthening of the preceding vowel.
Distribution
Preaspiration is perhaps best known from North Germanic languages, most prominently in Icelandic and Faroese, but also some dialects of Norwegian and Swedish. It is also a prominent feature of Scottish Gaelic. The presence of preaspiration in Gaelic has been attributed to North Germanic influence. Within Northwestern Europe preaspiration is furthermore found in most Sami languages, except Inari Sami where it has been replaced by postaspiration. The historical relationship between preaspiration in Sami and North Germanic is disputed: there is general agreement of a connection, but not on whether it represents Sami influence in North Germanic, North Germanic influence in Sami, or parallel sprachbund influence in both languages.Elsewhere in the world, preaspiration occurs in Halh Mongolian, Western Yugur, and in several American indigenous languages, including dialects of Hopi, Purepecha, and many languages of the Algonquian family.
Examples
English
In certain accents, such as Geordie and in some speakers of Dublin English word- and utterance-final can be preaspirated.Faroese
Some examples of preaspirated plosives and affricates from Faroese :- klappa, 'clap'
- hattur, 'hat'
- takka, 'thank'
- søkkja, 'sink'
- apa, 'ape', but: vípa, 'northern lapwing'
- eta, 'eat', but: hiti, 'heat'
- vøka, 'wake', but: húka, to 'squat'
- høkja, 'crutch', but: vitja, to 'visit'
Icelandic
- kappi, 'hero'
- hattur, 'hat'
- þakka, 'thank'
- hætta, 'stop/quit'
Huautla Mazatec
- - 'fish'
- - 'a sore'
- - 'small'
- - 'stubble'
Sami languages
In several Sami languages, preaspirated stops/affricates contrast with lax voiceless stops, either due to denasalization of earlier clusters or in connection to consonant gradation.
Scottish Gaelic
In Scottish Gaelic, however, due to the historical loss of voiced stops preaspiration is phonemic in medial and final positions after stressed vowels.Its strength varies from area to area and can manifest itself as or or in areas with strong preaspiration as or. The occurrence of preaspiration follows a hierarchy of c > t > p; i.e. if a dialect has preaspiration with p, it will also have it in the other places of articulation. Preaspiration manifests itself as follows:
- Area 1 as and
- Area 2 as and
- Area 3 as and
- Area 4 as
- Area 5 as and
- Area 6 no preaspiration
- glag "clock" vs glac "grab"
- ad "hat" vs at "boil"
- leag "throw down" vs leac "flagstone"
- aba "abbot" vs apa "ape"
H-clusters