Voiceless glottal affricate

Voiceless glottal affricate
ʔ͡h
ʔ͜h
ʔh
IPA number 113 146
Encoding
X-SAMPA ?_h
Sound
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The voiceless glottal affricate is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages. The symbols in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represent this sound are ʔ͡h and ʔ͜h, and the equivalent X-SAMPA symbol is ?_h. The tie bar is sometimes omitted, yielding ʔh in the IPA and ?h in X-SAMPA. This is potentially problematic in case of at least some affricates, because there are languages that contrast certain affricates with stop-fricative sequences. Polish words czysta ('clean (f.)', pronounced with an affricate /t͡ʂ/) and trzysta ('three hundred', pronounced with a sequence /tʂ/) are an example of a minimal pair based on such a contrast.

Features

Features of the voiceless glottal affricate:

Occurrence

Language Word IPA Meaning Notes
Chinese Yuxi dialect[1][2] [ʔ͡ho˥˧] 'can, may' Corresponds to /kʰ/ in Standard Chinese.[2][3]
English Received Pronunciation[4] hat [ʔ͡haʔt] 'hat' Possible allophone of /h/, especially in stressed syllables.[4] See English phonology

References

Bibliography

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