pronounced as /notice/In linguistics, fortis and lenis (and ;[1] Latin for "strong" and "weak"), sometimes identified with 'tense' and 'lax', are pronunciations of consonants with relatively greater and lesser energy, respectively. English has fortis consonants, such as the p in pat, with a corresponding lenis consonant, such as the b in bat. Fortis and lenis consonants may be distinguished by tenseness or other characteristics, such as voicing, aspiration, glottalization, velarization, length, and length of nearby vowels. Fortis and lenis were coined for languages where the contrast between sounds such as 'p' and 'b' does not involve voicing (vibration of the vocal cords).[2]
Originally, the terms were used to refer to an impressionistic sense of strength differences, though more sophisticated instruments eventually gave the opportunity to search for the acoustic and articulatory signs. For example, tested whether articulatory strength could be detected by measuring the force of the contact between the articulators or of the peak pressure in the mouth. Because such studies initially found little to substantiate the terminology, phoneticians have largely ceased using them, though they are still commonly used as "phonological labels for specifying a dichotomy when used language-specifically."[3] This can be useful when the actual articulatory features underlying the distinction are unknown, under-researched or irrelevant.
Later studies have shown that articulatory strength is not completely irrelevant. The articulators in the mouth can move with a greater velocity and/or with higher electromyographic activation levels of the relevant articulatory muscles with fortis consonants than with lenis ones.
Generally, voiceless stops have greater oral pressure than voiced ones, which could explain this greater articulatory energy. In Ewe, for example, the lips reach closure faster in articulating pronounced as //p// than in pronounced as //b//, making the lip closure longer. These differences in oral articulatory energy in consonants of different laryngeal settings is fairly widespread, though the correlation of energy and voicing is not universal. Indeed, a number of languages have been proposed as making strength differences independently of voicing, such as Tabasaran, Archi, Udi, and Aghul.[4]
It is rare for the use of greater respiratory energy for segments to occur in a language, though some examples do exist, such as Korean, which makes a three way contrast amongst most of its obstruents with voiceless, aspirated, and a third faucalized voiced set that involves both an increase in subglottal pressure as well as greater glottal constriction and tenseness in the walls of the vocal tract. Igbo has also been observed to utilize an increase in subglottal pressure involving its aspirated consonants.
"Fortis" and "lenis" have also been used to refer to contrasts of consonant duration in languages like Jawoyn,[5] Ojibwe, Dalabon, Kunwinjku, and Zurich German. The Zapotec languages are also considered to have contrast of length rather than of voicing.[6] For example, in Mixe, lenis consonants are not only pronounced shorter than their fortis counterparts, but they are also prone to voicing in voiced environments, which fortis consonants are not.
This association with longer duration has prompted some to propose a diachronic link between fortis consonants and gemination.[7] even proposes that gemination is itself a process of fortition in Italian.
Many North Caucasian languages (Northwest and especially Northeast) have a consonantal distinction described as "strong" or "preruptive" that has concomitant length. Akhvakh and other Northeast Caucasian languages even possess a distinction between strong/long and weak/short ejective consonants: pronounced as /[qʼaː]/ ('soup') vs. pronounced as /[qʼːama]/ ('cock's comb')
describes the fortis consonants for Archi:
Fortis stops in Australian Aboriginal languages such as Rembarunga (see Ngalakgan) also involve length, with short consonants having weak contact and intermittent voicing, and long consonants having full closure, a more powerful release burst, and no voicing. It is not clear if strength makes the consonants long, or if during long consonants there is a greater opportunity for full articulation.
Articulatory strength can reinforce other distinctions. Ewe, for example, which contrasts a voiceless bilabial fricative pronounced as //ɸ// and a voiceless labiodental fricative pronounced as //f//, pronounces the latter markedly more strongly than pronounced as //f// in most languages. This helps differentiate what would otherwise be a very subtle distinction.
In English, use of the terms "fortis" and "lenis" is useful to refer to contrasts between consonants that have different phonetic attributes depending on context. The alveolar consonants pronounced as //t// and pronounced as //d//, for example:
Depending on dialect, pronounced as //t// and pronounced as //d// may not neutralize with flapping, with the contrast manifesting itself in the preceding vowel's duration.
In the same syllable, the distinction between pronounced as //t// and pronounced as //d// is lost after pronounced as /[s]/.
As the above table shows, no one feature is adequate to accurately reflect the contrasts in all contexts. Word-initially, the contrast has more to do with aspiration; pronounced as //t// is aspirated and pronounced as //d// is an unaspirated voiceless stop. In the syllable coda, however, pronounced as //t// is instead pronounced with glottalization, unrelease, and a shorter vowel while pronounced as //d// remains voiceless. In this way, the terms fortis and lenis are convenient in discussing English phonology, even if they are phonetically imprecise.
In southern German dialects, the actual distinction underlying obstruent pairs varies somewhat depending on the dialect, but is often one of length—fortis sounds are pronounced geminated in all positions in a word, even at the end of a word or before other consonants.