T-glottalization explained

pronounced as /notice/

In English phonology, t-glottalization or t-glottalling is a sound change in certain English dialects and accents, particularly in the United Kingdom, that causes the phoneme to be pronounced as the glottal stop pronounced as /link/ in certain positions. It is never universal, especially in careful speech, and it most often alternates with other allophones of pronounced as //t// such as, pronounced as /[tʰ]/, pronounced as /[tⁿ]/ (before a nasal), pronounced as /[tˡ]/ (before a lateral), or pronounced as /[ɾ]/.

As a sound change, it is a subtype of debuccalization. The pronunciation that it results in is called glottalization. Apparently, glottal reinforcement, which is quite common in English, is a stage preceding full replacement of the stop,[1] and indeed, reinforcement and replacement can be in free variation.

History

The earliest mentions of the process are in Scotland during the 19th century, when Henry Sweet commented on the phenomenon. Peter Trudgill has argued that it began in Norfolk, based on studies of rural dialects of those born in the 1870s.[2] The SED fieldworker Peter Wright found it in areas of Lancashire and said, "It is considered a lazy habit, but may have been in some dialects for hundreds of years."

Most early English dialectology focussed on rural areas, so it is hard to establish how long the process has existed in urban areas. It has long been seen as a feature of Cockney dialect,[3] and a 1955 study on Leeds dialect wrote that it occurred with "monotonous regularity" before consonants and often between vowel sounds.[4] David Crystal claims that the sound can be heard in Received Pronunciation (RP) speakers from the early 20th century such as Daniel Jones, Bertrand Russell and Ellen Terry. The Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary claims that t-glottalization is now most common in London, Leeds, Edinburgh, and Glasgow.

Uniquely for English in the West Indies, Barbadian English uses a glottal allophone for /t/, and also less frequently for /k/ and /p/.[5]

Glottal reinforcement (pre-glottalization)

Pre-glottalization of pronounced as //t// is found in RP and General American (GA) when the consonant pronounced as //t// occurs before another consonant, or before a pause:

The glottal closure overlaps with the consonant that it precedes, but the articulatory movements involved can usually be observed only by using laboratory instruments.[6] In words such as 'eaten' and 'button', pronounced with a glottal closure, it is generally almost impossible to know whether the pronounced as //t// has been pronounced (e.g. pronounced as /[ˈiːʔtn̩]/, pronounced as /[ˈbʌʔtn̩]/) or omitted (e.g. pronounced as /[ˈiːʔn̩]/, pronounced as /[ˈbʌʔn̩]/).

However, in the same syllable coda position, /t/ may instead be analyzed as an unreleased stop.[7]

In some accents of English, pronounced as //t// may be pre-glottalized intervocalically if it occurs finally in a stressed syllable. In the north-east of England and East Anglia, pronunciations such as 'paper' pronounced as /[ˈpeɪʔpə]/, 'happy' pronounced as /[ˈhæʔpi]/ are found.[1]

There is variation in the occurrence of glottalization within RP according to which consonant follows pronounced as //t//: for example, some speakers do not glottalize pronounced as //t// when pronounced as //r// follows, in words such as 'petrol' /ˈpɛtrəl/, 'mattress' /ˈmætrəs/.[8]

T-glottalization rarely occurs syllable-initially in English but has been reported in some words that begin pronounced as //tə// in some northern dialects.[9] [10]

Glottal replacement

In RP, and in many accents such as Cockney, it is common for pronounced as //t// to be completely replaced by a glottal stop before another consonant, as in not now pronounced as /[nɒʔnaʊ]/ and department pronounced as /[dɪpɑː(ɹ)ʔmənʔ]/. This replacement also happens before a syllabic, as in button (representable as pronounced as /[ˈbʌʔn̩]/) and some pronunciations of pattern (representable as pronounced as /[ˈpæʔn̩]/).

Among speakers of Britain, especially younger ones, glottal replacement of pronounced as //t// is frequently heard in intervocalic position before an unstressed vowel. It is most common between a stressed vowel and a reduced vowel (pronounced as //ə/, /ɪ//):

In both RP and GA, pronounced as //t//-replacement is found in absolute final position:

T-glottalization is believed to have been spreading in Southern England at a faster rate than th-fronting. Cruttenden comments that "Use of pronounced as /[ʔ]/ for pronounced as //t// word-medially intervocalically, as in water, still remains stigmatised in GB.[11] " (GB is his alternative term for RP). The increased use of glottal stops within RP is believed to be an influence from Cockney and other working-class urban speech. In a 1985 publication on the speech of West Yorkshire, KM Petyt found that t-glottalization was spreading from Bradford (where it had been reported in traditional dialect) to Halifax and Huddersfield (where it had not been reported in traditional dialect). In 1999, Shorrocks noted the phenomenon amongst young people in Bolton, Greater Manchester: "It is not at all typical of the traditional vernacular, in contradistinction to some other varieties of English, but younger people use pronounced as /[ʔ]/ medially between vowels more than their elders."[12]

Recent studies (Milroy, Milroy & Walshaw 1994, Fabricius 2000) have suggested that t-glottalization is increasing in RP speech. Prince Harry frequently glottalizes his t.[13] One study carried out by Anne Fabricius suggests that t-glottalization is increasing in RP, the reason for this being the dialect levelling of the Southeast. She has argued that a wave-like profile of t-glottalization has been going on through the regions, which has begun with speakers in London, due to the influence of Cockney. She says that this development is due to the population size of the capital, as well as London's dominance of the Southeast of England. However, Miroslav Ježek has argued that linguists attribute changes to London too readily, and that the evidence suggests that t-glottalization began in Scotland and worked its way down gradually to London.

North American dialects

American and Canadian English accents feature t-glottalization, heard in the following contexts:

Glottal replacement - or even deletion entirely in quick speech - in the coda position of a syllable is a distinctive feature of the speech of some speakers in the U.S. state of Connecticut.[14]

T-glottalization, especially at word boundaries, is considered both a geographic and sociolinguistic phenomenon, with rates increasing both in the western U.S. and in younger female speakers.[15]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Lodge. Ken. A Critical Introduction to Phonetics. 2009. Continuum International Publishing Group. 978-0-8264-8873-2. 177.
  2. Book: Trudgill, Peter . 2016 . Dialect Matters: Respecting Vernacular Language . UK . Cambridge University Press . 132 . 9781107130470 .
  3. Wells, John C. (1982). Accents of English. Volume 2: The British Isles (pp. 323-327). Cambridge University Press. 0-52128540-2.
  4. Courtney, Maureen R (1955), The Living Dialect of Leeds in the West Riding of Yorkshire, page 7. Available in the Leeds Archive of Vernacular Culture.
  5. Wells, John C. (1982), Accents of English 3: Beyond the British Isles, page 584, Cambridge, New York: Cambridge University Press,
  6. Roach, P.J. (1979) `Laryngeal-oral coarticulation in glottalised English plosives', Journal of the International Phonetic Association, 9, pp. 1-6)
  7. Odden, David (2005). Introduction to Phonology. Page 32.
  8. Roach, P.J. `Glottalization of English /p,t,k,tʃ/ - a re-examination', Journal of the International Phonetic Association,3, 10-21. (1973)
  9. KM Petyt, Dialect' and Accent in Industrial West Yorkshire, John Benjamins Publishing Company, 1985, p. 219
  10. Docherty, Foulkes, Milroy, Milroy and Walshaw (1997) Descriptive adequacy in phonology in Journal of Linguistics 33, p. 290
  11. Book: Gimson, ed. A. Cruttenden. Gimson's Pronunciation of English. 2014. Routledge. 184. 8th.
  12. Book: Shorrocks, Graham . 1999 . A Grammar of the Dialect of the Bolton Area, Part 1 . Frankfurt am Main . Peter Lang . 3-631-33066-9 . 319.
  13. Also see The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the English Language, p. 365
  14. Web site: The Connecticut Accent, or does Connecticut even have one? . New England Historical Society. 8 December 2019.
  15. Web site: Eddington . David . T-Glottalization in American English . Duke University Press.