Voiceless glottal fricative

Voiceless glottal fricative
h
IPA number 146
Encoding
Entity (decimal) h
Unicode (hex) U+0068
X-SAMPA h
Kirshenbaum h
Sound

 

The voiceless glottal transition, commonly called a "fricative", is a type of sound used in some spoken languages which patterns like a fricative or approximant consonant phonologically, but often lacks the usual phonetic characteristics of a consonant. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is ⟨h⟩, and the equivalent X-SAMPA symbol is h.

Although [h] has been described as a voiceless vowel, because in many languages it lacks the place and manner of articulation of a prototypical consonant, it also lacks the height and backness of a prototypical vowel:

[h and ɦ] have been described as voiceless or breathy voiced counterparts of the vowels that follow them [but] the shape of the vocal tract […] is often simply that of the surrounding sounds. […] Accordingly, in such cases it is more appropriate to regard h and ɦ as segments that have only a laryngeal specification, and are unmarked for all other features. There are other languages [such as Hebrew and Arabic] which show a more definite displacement of the formant frequencies for h, suggesting it has a [glottal] constriction associated with its production.[1]

Contents

Features

Features of the "voiceless glottal fricative":

Occurrence

Language Word IPA Meaning Notes
Arabic Standard[2] هاتِف [ˈhaːt̪if] 'telephone' See Arabic phonology
Armenian հայերեն 'Armenian'
Asturian guae [ɣwahe] 'child' Mainly present in eastern dialects
Avar гьа [ha] 'oath'
Basque North-Eastern dialects hirur [hiɾur] 'three'
Chechen хIара/hara [hɑrɐ] 'this'
Chinese Cantonese /ho4 [hɔː] 'river' See Cantonese phonology
Coptic ϩρα [ehra] 'face'
Dutch Some Hollandic dialects haat [haːt] 'hate' Realized as [ɦ] in other dialects. See Dutch phonology
English high [ˈhaɪ] 'high' See English phonology
Faroese hon [hoːn] 'she'
Finnish hammas [hɑmːɑs] 'tooth' See Finnish phonology
Georgian[3] ავა [hɑvɑ] 'climate'
German[4] Hass [has] 'hatred' See German phonology
Hawaiian[5] haka [haka] 'shelf' See Hawaiian phonology
Hebrew הר [haʁ] 'mountain' See Modern Hebrew phonology
Hindi Standard[2] हम [ˈhəm] 'we' See Hindi-Urdu phonology
Hmong hawm [haɨ̰] 'to honor'
Hungarian helyes [hɛjɛʃ] 'right' See Hungarian phonology
Japanese すはだ/suhada [sɯhada] 'bare skin' See Japanese phonology
Korean 호랑이/horang-i [hoɾaŋi] 'tiger' See Korean phonology
Kabardian тхылъхэ [tχɪɬhɑ] 'books'
Lao ຫ້າ [haː˧˩] 'five'
Leonese guaje [wahe] 'boy'
Malay hari [hari] 'day'
Navajo hastiin [hàsd̥ìːn]
Norwegian hatt [hɑtː] 'hat' See Norwegian phonology
Pashto هو [ho] 'yes'
Persian هفت [hæft] 'seven' See Persian phonology
Pirahã hi [hì] 'he'
Portuguese Brazilian[6] carro [ˈkahʊ] 'car' Also realized as a velar or uvular fricative. See Portuguese phonology
Romanian hăţ [həts] 'bridle' See Romanian phonology
Spanish[7] Many dialects obispo [o̞ˈβihpo̞] 'bishop' Allophone of /s/. See Spanish phonology
Some dialects jaca [ˈhaka] 'pony' corresponds to /x/ in other dialects.
Thai ห้า [haː˥˩] 'five'
Turkish halı [häˈɫɯ] 'carpet' See Turkish phonology
Ubykh [dwaha] 'prayer' See Ubykh phonology
Urdu Standard[2] ہم [ˈhəm] 'we' See Hindi-Urdu phonology
Vietnamese[8] hiểu [hjew˧˩˧] 'understand' See Vietnamese phonology
Welsh haul [ˈhaɨl] 'sun' See Welsh orthography
West Frisian hoeke [hukə] 'corner'
Yi /hxa [ha˧] 'hundred'

See also

References

Bibliography