Slack voice

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Slack voice (or lax voice) is the pronunciation of consonant or vowels 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 the case of consonants. In some Chinese varieties, such as Wu, and in a few Austronesian languages, the 'intermediate' phonation of slack stops confuses listeners of languages without these distinctions, so that different transcription systems may use p or b for the same consonant. In Xhosa, slack-voiced consonants have usually been transcribed as breathy voice. Although the IPA has no dedicated diacritic for slack voice, the voiceless diacritic (the under-ring) may be used with a voiced consonant letter, though this convention is also used for partially voiced consonants in languages such as English. [1]

Wu Chinese "muddy" consonants are slack voice word-initially, the primary effect of which is a slightly breathy quality of the following vowel. [1]

BilabialAlveolarVelar
IPAWuglossIPAWuglossIPAWugloss
slack voice[b̥ʌ̀ʔ]'white'[d̥ǐ]'earth'[ɡ̊ə̀ʔ](possessive particle)
tenuis [pʌ́ʔ]'hundred'[tíʔ](a grammatical particle)[kóʔ]'corner'
aspirated [pʰʌ́ʔ]'to strike'[tʰî]'sky'[kʰʌ́ʔ]'guest'

Javanese contrasts slack and stiff voiced bilabial, dental, retroflex, and velar stops. [1]

BilabialDental StopDental AffricateRetroflexVelar
phonationIPAglossIPAglossIPAglossIPAglossIPAgloss
stiff voice[paku]'nail'[tamu]'guest'[tsariʔ]'sheet (of paper)'[ʈiʈiʔ]'little'[kali]'river'
slack voice[b̥aku]'standard'[d̥amu]'blow'[d̥z̥arit](type of women's clothing)[ɖ̥isiʔ]'first'[ɡ̊ali]'dig'


Parauk contrasts slack voicing in its vowels. The contrast is between "slightly stiff" and "slightly breathy" vowels; the first are between modal and stiff voice, while the latter are captured by slack voice. [1]

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References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Ladefoged, Peter; Maddieson, Ian (1996). The Sounds of the World's Languages. Oxford: Blackwell. pp. 63–6. ISBN   0-631-19815-6.