A stop, plosive, or occlusive is a consonant sound produced by stopping the airflow in the vocal tract. The term plosive is reserved for oral (non-nasal) stops: that is, stops with a release burst.
All languages in the world have stops and most have at least *," target="_blank" >*." target="_blank" >Colloquial Samoan lacks the dentals *," target="_blank" >and the northern Iroquoian languages lack the labials *. Several of the Chimakuan, Salishan, and Wakashan languages around Puget Sound lack nasal stops.
In many languages, such as Malay and Vietnamese, final stops lack a release burst, or have a nasal release. See Unreleased stop.
In affricate stops, the release is a fricative.
Nasal stops are acoustically sonorants, as they have a non-turbulent airflow and are nearly always voiced, but they are articulatorily obstruents, as there is complete blockage of the oral cavity.
A prenasalized stop starts out with a lowered velum that raises during the occlusion. The closest examples in English are consonant clusters such as the in candy, but many languages have prenasalized stops that behave as single consonants. Swahili is well known for having words that begin with sounds like *.
A postnasalized stop begins with a raised velum that lowers during the occlusion. This causes an audible nasal release, as in English sudden. Russian and other Slavic languages have words that begin with *, which can be seen in the name of the Dnieper River.
Note that the terms prenasalization and postnasalization are normally only used in languages where these sounds are phonemic, that is, not analyzed into sequences of plosive plus nasal stop.
In most dialects of English, the final g in the word bag is likely to be fully voiced, while the initial b will be only partially voiced. Initial voiceless plosives, like the p in pie, are aspirated, with a palpable puff of air upon release, while a plosive after an s, as in spy, is tenuous. If you speak near a candle flame, you will see that the flame will flicker more when you say pie, tie, chi than when you say spy, sty, sky.
Note that there are many languages where the features voice, aspiration, and length reinforce each other, and in such cases it may be hard to tell which of these features predominates. In such cases the terms fortis is sometimed used for aspiration or gemination, while lenis is used for single, tenuous or voiced stops. Beware, however, that the terms fortis and lenis are poorly defined, and their meanings vary from source to source.
There are a series of stops in Korean, sometimes written with the IPA symbol for ejectives, which are produced using "stiff voice", meaning there is increased contraction of the glottis than for normal production of voiceless stops. The indirect evidence for stiff voice is in the following vowels, which have a higher fundamental frequency than those following other stops. The higher frequency is explained as a result of the glottis being tense. Other such phonation types include breathy voice, or murmur; slack voice; and creaky voice.
, , (in most dialects: partially voiced word-initially, fully voiced intervocalically)
, , (fully voiced nasal stops)
(glottal stop, not as a phoneme in most dialects)
Klusil | Verschlusslaut | Consonne occlusive | 파열음 | עיצורים פוצצים | Consonante occlusiva | Plosief | 破裂音 | Plosiv | Lukkelyd | Spółgłoska zwarta | Consoană oclusivă | Klusiili | Klusil | 塞音
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It uses material from the
"Stop consonant".
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