Click (phonetics)
A click (also click, click (loud), injective ) is a velar - ingressive closure sound , which is formed by two closures in the vocal tract (attachment tube). The noise generated by these sounds is caused by the opening of the primary closure of the resulting oral air chamber, into which the surrounding air consequently flows quickly in order to compensate for the negative pressure.
The clicks are formed in several ways by clicking your tongue. In order to generate the clicks, the tongue must perform a sucking motion. The position of the tongue and the way in which you inhale produce very different clicks.
When used in words, it is quite difficult for non-native speakers to associate them with surrounding consonants and vowels.
Occurrence
Clicking occurs in many languages, for example as an expression of disapproval or to attract attention. The only living languages, however, where clicking sounds as regular speech sounds (or phonemes ) may be used are, African Khoisan languages (for example, Khoekhoegowab , one of the national languages Namibia ) and adjacent languages of Bantu language group (z. B. Zulu , Xhosa , South Sotho and Yeyi ) and the Kushitic language Dahalo , which most likely adopted such sounds from the Khoisan. In all three language groups together there are around 80 languages. Some of the Khoisan languages, such as the ǃXóõ , have over 80 different clicks in their phoneme inventory.
The only non-African language known to have been used regularly by clicks is Demiin , an alternative language encoding used by speakers of Lardil , an Australian language , in a kind of language game . The language is now extinct.
In music, clicking is used as an element of vocal percussion . A prominent example is the 2004 number one hit Drop It Like It's Hot by Snoop Dogg feat. Pharrell .
Spelling
The orthographies of various languages of southern Africa, for example Khoekhoegowab, use special click- sounding letters to write the clicks, as they are also used in the International Phonetic Alphabet . These letters then come in geographical names, personal names and names of mythological figures in front (such as from the mythology of Ju|'hoansi the namesake for the dwarf planet candidates (229762) G!kúnǁ'hòmdímà ). Other languages ( e.g. isiXhosa ) use letters from the basic Latin alphabet for clicks.
IPA
The International Phonetic Association (IPA) differentiates between five clicks in its publications and assigns them to corresponding characters ( International Phonetic Alphabet ):
- Bilabial [ ʘ ] : Similar to an air kiss with unrounded lips.
- Dental [ | ] : The tongue tip is brought to the front teeth. This sound is sometimes used in German to express reproach or disappointment.
- (Post) alveolar [ ! ] : The tongue tip is possible far up at the ceiling of the oral cavity.
- Palatoalveolar [ ǂ ] : The tongue tip is pressed against the front of the hard palate and then withdrawn as quickly as possible. That sounds like a cork popping.
- Alveolar lateral [ ǁ ] : The tongue is brought to the back teeth sideways.
Overview of the click sounds that can be displayed in the IPA in connection with other non-pulmonary consonants :
Non-pulmonary consonants | bilabial |
labio- dental |
dental | alveolar | alveolar-lateral |
alveolo- palatal |
post- alveolar |
retroflex | palatal | velar | uvular | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Clicks | ʘ | ǀ | ǃ | ǁ | ǂ | ǃ˞ | ||||||
Implosive | ɓ | ɗ | ʄ | ɠ | ʛ | |||||||
Ejectives | Ejective plosives | pʼ | t̪ʼ | tʼ | ʈʼ | cʼ | k ' | qʼ | ||||
Ejective fricatives | ɸʼ | fʼ | θʼ | sʼ | ɬʼ | ɕʼ | ʃʼ | ʂʼ | çʼ | xʼ | χʼ | |
Ejective Affricates | t͡θʼ | t͡sʼ | t͡ɬʼ | t͡ɕʼ | t͡ʃʼ | ʈ͡ʂʼ | c͡çʼ | k͡xʼ | q͡χʼ |
See also
literature
- Otto von Essen : General and applied phonetics. 5th, revised and expanded edition. Akademie-Verlag, Berlin 1979, pp. 27f., 115 (about clicks / clicks).
Web links
- Clicks. (PDF) Center for General Linguistics (ZAS) Berlin, archived from the original on September 28, 2007 ; Retrieved August 20, 2013 .
- Karl Heinz Wagner: Introduction to Phonetics and Phonology - Air Flow Processes. (PDF) University of Bremen (Department of Linguistics and Literature), February 4, 2004, archived from the original on June 11, 2007 ; Retrieved August 20, 2013 .
- Are there any primitive languages? An interview with the Cologne Africanist Christa Kilian-Hatz. In: GEO Magazin No. 07/03 - Envy. July 15, 2003, archived from the original on September 15, 2005 ; Retrieved August 20, 2013 .
- Peter Ladefoged: ǃXóõ click places of articulation. In: A Course in Phonetics. Archived from the original on June 14, 2012 ; accessed on August 20, 2013 (English, audio samples).
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b Khoekhoegowab: 3ǁî xoaǀgaub = orthography 3 . Namibia Publishing House, Windhoek 2002, ISBN 978-99916-0-408-4 .
- ↑ George N. Clement: Phonology. In: Bernd Heine , Derek Nurse: African languages. An introduction. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge et al. 2000, ISBN 0-521-66178-1 , pp. 123-160, here p. 150.
- ↑ Inward Click Roll. humanbeatbox.com, November 29, 2018, accessed on August 23, 2013 (English, video).
- ↑ (229762) Gǃkúnǁ'hòmdímà in the Small-Body Database of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (English). Retrieved April 4, 2020.
- ^ The International Phonetic Association: Reproduction of The International Phonetic Alphabet (Revised to 2005). Consonants (Non-Pulmonic). ( online ( memento of February 24, 2013 in the Internet Archive ))