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The glottal stop or voiceless glottal plosive is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is ʔ, and the equivalent X-SAMPA symbol is ?. The glottal stop is the sound made when the vocal cords are pressed together, and is the sound in the middle of the interjection uh-oh. In many dialects of English, glottal stop is an allophone of /t/ in final position, such as the "t" in habit or pat. In some dialects, eg. Cockney, glottal stop is also an allophone of /t/ in medial position, such as in the word bottle or fatter. In other languages, it is a full phoneme. In these cases, it is sometimes written as an opening single quote ‘, as in Hawai‘ian, where it is called ‘okina. Maltese uses the letter q to denote the sound. Other examples of language using phonemic glottal stop are Nahuatl and many other Native American languages; Samoan; Hebrew; Arabic; and Japanese. In German and Dutch, glottal stop is not phonemic, but it is inserted in multi-morphemic words before morphemes that begin with a vowel, such as German Beamter (="civil servant") or Dutch beamen (="to endorse"), where the glottal stop is inserted after the prefix "be-".
| IPA - Unicode | ʔ |
| IPA - image | |
| X-SAMPA | ? |
| Kirshenbaum | ? |
| Sound sample | |
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Features of this consonant: