Slack voice
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Phonation |
---|
Glottal states (from open to closed) |
voiceless (full airstream) |
breathy voice (murmur) |
whisper |
slack voice |
modal voice (maximum vibration) |
stiff voice |
creaky voice (restricted airstream) |
glottalized (blocked airstream) |
Supra-glottal phonation |
faucalized voice ("hollow") |
harsh voice ("pressed") |
strident (harsh trilled) |
Vocal registers |
whistle |
falsetto |
modal |
vocal fry |
The term slack voice (or lax voice) describes the pronunciation of consonants with a glottal opening slightly wider than that occurring in modal voice. Such sounds are often referred to informally as lenis or half-voiced. In some Chinese languages, such as Wu, and in many Austronesian languages, the 'intermediate' phonation of slack stops confuses Western listeners, so that different transcription systems may use /p/ or /b/ for the same consonant. Although the IPA has no dedicated diacritic for slack voice, the voiceless diacritic (the under-ring) may be used with a voiced consonant letter.
Javanese contrasts slack and stiff voiced bilabial, dental, retroflex, and velar stops:
Javanese | form | translation |
---|---|---|
stiff voice | [d̬amu] | guest |
slack voice | [d̥amu] | blow |
The Shanghainese "muddy" consonants are also slack voice, the primary effect of which is a slightly breathy quality of the following vowel:
Shanghainese | form | translation |
---|---|---|
slack voice | [d̥ǐ] | earth |
tenuis | [tíʔ] | (a grammatical particle) |
aspirated | [tʰí] | heaven |