![]() ![]() Aspiration is more than just that release, it is the entire pattern of increased airflow. The increased airflow associated with release of stricture is very high, very briefly, as the intraoral pressure is relieved and the vocal folds can move back into position for voicing. The tactile percept of a "puff of air" is not a particularly reliable means of measuring airflow - you need an airflow mask to measure airflow. A voiced stop may also have a release burst, so you may detect a "puff of air", but it's not a big puff of air. Instead, we talk of the release burst of, vs. What it means is that there is a high rate of airflow after the release of stricture, but all stops have some increased airflow after the stricture is released. This does not mean that there is no airflow after release of a stricture – there always is airflow. The Ladefoged and Maddieson definition defines a basically phonetic distinction contrast to a different type of phonation, namely modal voice.Ī voiceless aspirated stop has a greater rate of airflow after its stricture, compared to a (modal) unaspirated voiceless stop. You can see that "breathy voice" combines the properties of aspiration (increased airflow) with the properties of voicing (vocal fold vibration). Vocal folds vibrating but without appreciable contact arytenoidĬartilages further apart than in modal voice higher rate of airflow ![]() They also distinguish aspiration from breathy voice = murmur, which is Having a greater rate of airflow than occurs in modal voice before orĪfter a stricture arytenoid cartilages may be further apart than for ![]() Ladefoged & Maddieson proffer a phonetic definition Given that you're appealing to physical production and not phonology, I assume you don't care about aspiration as a phonological property, you just are about production (Wiki articles have many authors so there is no consistent perspective). "Aspiration" is used in multiple ways, phonetically and phonologically, which can lead to some confusion, and Wiki reflects that confusion. ![]()
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