EJECTIVE CONSONANTS in ENGLISH: Why do English speakers pronounce /k/ like that?

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  • čas přidán 25. 06. 2020
  • In this video I answer the question: what is that special /k/ that some speakers use at the end of words?
    MRI videos from www.seeingspeech.ac.uk
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Komentáře • 2,1K

  • @irgendwer3610
    @irgendwer3610 Před rokem +2386

    you are so incredibly informative to both laymen and long time linguistics enthusiasts, absolutely enjoyed this video

    • @chriscorbo7439
      @chriscorbo7439 Před rokem +3

      I indeed want to know what this special k is, who’s using it and how to make it. 👀

    • @ajwinberg
      @ajwinberg Před rokem +1

      Right?

    • @Malchiar010695
      @Malchiar010695 Před rokem +1

      You probably lay men

    • @rsvihla
      @rsvihla Před rokem +1

      As he said, it’s not a click.

  • @jlynec
    @jlynec Před rokem +6794

    It's so bizarre to suddenly hear the click after being a native English speaker for 40 years lol. I don't think I'll ever unhear it!

    • @ConDude25
      @ConDude25 Před rokem +129

      I thought the same thing! Also bizarre that you can say the words both ways correctly.

    • @rhopi
      @rhopi Před rokem +89

      As an Indian it was the other way round for me. In Indian languages, the ejective sounds are separate consonants and in Indian English we primarily use the ejective sounds so that's how I used to hear it. Only recently did I realise that Western speakers primarily use the 'regular' sounds.

    • @pratn
      @pratn Před rokem +12

      @@rhopi can you give an example from an Indian language

    • @rhopi
      @rhopi Před rokem +52

      @@pratn For example, in Hindi we have the letters क for ejective K and ख for regular K. But when speaking English, Indians generally use the former for K.

    • @dani-elle-au9935
      @dani-elle-au9935 Před rokem +2

      That's arguable 🤣

  • @mogki4d
    @mogki4d Před 3 lety +1275

    k'- snare drum
    p' - kick drum
    t'- hi-hat
    Now go forth and beatbox

    • @grzegorzbrzeczyszczykiewic8158
      @grzegorzbrzeczyszczykiewic8158 Před 2 lety +104

      I can confirm that the ejectives are used in beatboxing

    • @drunkdriver983
      @drunkdriver983 Před rokem +66

      May I suggest a ts’ for a hi hat

    • @markcox5385
      @markcox5385 Před rokem +107

      t’ for closed hi-hat. ts’ for open hi-hat. 😀

    • @SIC647
      @SIC647 Před rokem +11

      Ohh. Thank you. Now I understand how my son can do a rythm and melody at the same time.

    • @Ixaglet
      @Ixaglet Před rokem +52

      I'm an ESL teacher and I teach my students to beatbox by saying "boots, cats", without pronouncing the vowels. B-ts-C-ts :D

  • @qwertyTRiG
    @qwertyTRiG Před rokem +1601

    Using Tom Scott as a linguistics sample is excellent!

    • @Mythraen
      @Mythraen Před rokem +55

      When he fixes his channel so that you can say words like "he" and "black" without having your comment shadowbanned, maybe I'll stop thinking of him with anything besides disgust.
      Try it, go to a video of his, make a perfectly innocuous comment in reply to any thread, use the word "he" in it somewhere, then check the thread while logged out and you won't see your comment. (Note, use a link to the thread and _not_ a link to the specific comment. Those will work.)
      There's quite a number of perfectly innocent words that will cause this, and it seriously disrupts the ability to have a discussion under his videos. I e-mailed him about it more than a year ago. I never received a response and, so far as I know, nothing has been done.

    • @jacobbannier
      @jacobbannier Před rokem +4

      I'm APPAULED!

    • @MysticKoolAidMan
      @MysticKoolAidMan Před rokem +27

      @@Mythraen yikes, just tested, he's right

    • @molamolalaaa2968
      @molamolalaaa2968 Před rokem +10

      @@Mythraen I kind of understand ‘black’ but what’s wrong with ‘he’?

    • @Mythraen
      @Mythraen Před rokem +83

      @@molamolalaaa2968 I mean, I can only speculate on what happened. My speculation is that someone (not necessarily Tom, as I expect he has channel managers for this) tried to ban a phrase/sentence/comment and instead banned all of the words in that phrase/sentence/comment individually.
      Also, while you can certainly say some bad things about black people and that's not acceptable, referring to black people or black, the color, is generally not remotely controversial in itself. I discovered this one while talking about his _black_ and white lines video.
      Note, those two words were the ones I remembered. There were several more that I found, and likely many I did not find.
      If you want a real explanation, though, I suggest you ask Tom Scott... and then he can ignore your e-mail too.

  • @ElectronerpProductions
    @ElectronerpProductions Před rokem +153

    i'm a na'vi learner, and your video is now being used within the community as an example of how to use the ejectives!

    • @DrGeoffLindsey
      @DrGeoffLindsey  Před rokem +44

      Really? Can you give me a link of some kind?

    • @KevinJennissen
      @KevinJennissen Před rokem +12

      @@DrGeoffLindsey You know that the aliens from Avatar you jokingly used in the video are called na'vi, right?
      EDIT: this comment was egotistical, lame, and innacurate. I apologize.

    • @ferrous719
      @ferrous719 Před rokem +29

      ​@@KevinJennissen he literally named them. He was requesting an example of his work being used for teaching.

    • @KevinJennissen
      @KevinJennissen Před rokem +49

      @@ferrous719 Wow, I am stupid. I thought the commenter was joking and claiming to be a literal na'vi, not someone learning the fictional language.
      I want to delete my snarky, "um, actually" comment, but I'll leave it up to possibly embolden others to admit their mistakes and learn from them.

    • @corneliastreet2491
      @corneliastreet2491 Před rokem +1

      I’d love a linK or a piK

  • @unvergebeneid
    @unvergebeneid Před rokem +2184

    As a native German speaker who's trying to lose his tell-tale glottal stop before vowels, it's comforting to hear that native English speakers are on their way to meet me half-way 😄

    • @cinnamon3389
      @cinnamon3389 Před rokem +50

      I’m a native English speaker and I tend to say a glottal stop before vowels too, am I not meant to do that?

    • @jakobraahauge7299
      @jakobraahauge7299 Před rokem +61

      I learned a formal British English - one of things I had work on to make it sound more palatable to Americans was to kick the glottal stop. I was surprisingly hard for me to soften my accent!
      Now I speak an obscure with somewhat continental accent somewhere in between British and American English.
      Unless I snap - then I regress right back to what I learned in school 🤬😂

    • @unvergebeneid
      @unvergebeneid Před rokem +19

      @@jakobraahauge7299 And here I thought sounding _any_ kind of British would immediately get you laid in the US...

    • @TS29er
      @TS29er Před rokem +9

      That is exactly what I was thinking when he said that English native speakers tend to use the glottal stop more frequently

    • @unvergebeneid
      @unvergebeneid Před rokem +23

      @@cinnamon3389 I think as a native English speaker you're in the comfortable position to do whatever the heck you want ;D Except for that comma splice there... you're supposed to know better 😘

  • @Sally4th_
    @Sally4th_ Před rokem +2633

    I've been speaking English as a native for over 60 years and never noticed the click. This series is fascinating to get an outside perspective on something I just take for granted - the English language!

    • @thelukesternater
      @thelukesternater Před rokem +40

      Wow I’m half way, 30 years myself!

    • @DrGeoffLindsey
      @DrGeoffLindsey  Před rokem +150

      Thanks so much. (By the way ejectives are strictly different from the sounds we call 'clicks' in phonetics, though obviously the sound is like a click.)

    • @seneca983
      @seneca983 Před rokem +17

      @@DrGeoffLindsey I think it would make more sense to call the click consonants something else. Maybe "smack" (in the sense of the sound of a loud kiss)? Ejectives sound more "clicky" to me than click consonants. Of course, changing established terminology would be difficult.

    • @danielmcelroy4505
      @danielmcelroy4505 Před rokem +2

      💯💯💯

    • @herrrob14
      @herrrob14 Před rokem +21

      I'm a native speaker of English who is a German teacher. I learned so much about the structure of German. However, in my 40's I started teaching English as second language, as well. I was blown away by how complicated the structure of English really is, including the sound system and grammatical structures. It's fascinating to discover all the rules and patterns that I've been following my whole life and I wasn't even aware of them.

  • @zammich3649
    @zammich3649 Před rokem +752

    We use A LOT of these (including [p'] and [t']) when teaching English to Japanese speakers. The Japanese language doesn't have many final consonants, so students can have trouble hearing and producing them without the extra emphasis granted by the ejective -- although over-using them can have the adverse effect of "coddling" students and pushing them to over-pronounce their words. Language and teaching language can both be tricky things.
    I never knew the word for these before or realized they were pronounced differently from a standard "kh" sound, though, so this video has been really informative!

    • @evantesseract737
      @evantesseract737 Před rokem +10

      @Suzann Lee I've been trying to learn Korean and going the other way is pretty tricky too 😂

    • @evantesseract737
      @evantesseract737 Před rokem +7

      @Suzann Lee it's the right kind of hard for me! Consonants I couldn't even hear at first and particles everywhere and having to figure out how formal I'm trying to be 🤣🤣🤣
      I'm three months in and at the point where I can hear a sentence in Korean and hear exactly enough words I recognize to say "he's politely agreeing with something and adding that something exists" or "wait we're talking about a dog, or maybe a crab" 😂

    • @mariah5714
      @mariah5714 Před rokem +6

      I'm working as an English teacher in Japan and just realized this because of your comment. I definitely do this when trying to teach kids how to pronounce things.

    • @doyleeee
      @doyleeee Před rokem +5

      I am a Japanese learner of English and I never knew this until now. I am very surprised because no one told me about it and I was not aware of it. Language learning is interesting.

    • @cjmacq-vg8um
      @cjmacq-vg8um Před rokem

      there's nothing odd about that. its called a "k" sound. the difference is many americans don't pronounce the "k" at the end of words. or they pronounce it lazily, like a "g.' i swear, people can't even get their differences right. there's NO problem with how the english pronounce "k's!"
      one thing i noticed, beginning particularly with oild beatles' interviews, the english tend to really sound-out the "g" with words ending in "ing." this "ejectivizing' really comes out on your "g's" not your "k's." americans's just kind of leave off the "g" sound at the end of words. "loving" becomes"lovin'." "standing" becomes "standin'."
      its the "g" not the "k" that's different.

  • @duetopersonalreasonsaaaaaa
    @duetopersonalreasonsaaaaaa Před rokem +424

    I was taught to pronounce words like this while singing in choir (USA), especially when a word ends with a 't' to make it more audible to the audience. So interesting to find this video by chance! Thank you, algorithm :)

    • @annasolovyeva1013
      @annasolovyeva1013 Před rokem +8

      Singing in choir in Russia it's even more complicated: you study to use the sounds in singing and in your English speaking (to emphasize the ends, Russian has quite a different approach to word endings), but you never speak like that.

    • @frankifyed.
      @frankifyed. Před rokem +20

      When you're recording music, its the opposite because mics are sensitive, which is why you have a pop filter between you and the mic to mitigate the harshness of plosives

    • @annasolovyeva1013
      @annasolovyeva1013 Před rokem +18

      @@frankifyed. academic technique is for a big hall /cathedral unamplified, not microphones. It often sounds awful with a micro.

    • @kendramiller8419
      @kendramiller8419 Před rokem +2

      Same. Taught this in choir but without the technical explanation.

    • @heidi_mcheidiface
      @heidi_mcheidiface Před rokem +3

      I learned that some choir members just sing the word normally and a few replace the consonants with harsher ones. For example the word God is frequent in choir music, and some people would sing Cod or Cot instead.

  • @benjaminwatt2469
    @benjaminwatt2469 Před 3 lety +1967

    Thank you. it's a little embarrassing when you're getting you masters in linguistics and you haven't even noticed this feature of language

    • @lujinahjfairi3760
      @lujinahjfairi3760 Před rokem +18

      May be because your visual perception is more dominant over your audio.

    • @litigioussociety4249
      @litigioussociety4249 Před rokem +52

      Unless you're studying a language that specifically uses the feature to distinguish between words, then it's not going to be relevant. Every language has ranges of pronunciation of different syllables, and has variations in dialects in regard to whether something is homophonic or not. As long as you're a descriptivist about language and not a prescriptivist, you'll be all right.

    • @tolgaaykut4557
      @tolgaaykut4557 Před rokem +38

      More embarrassing still, is that you have written “you” and not “your” in your statement. Bravo.

    • @ellisonsimon
      @ellisonsimon Před rokem +10

      @@tolgaaykut4557 Burn

    • @rillloudmother
      @rillloudmother Před rokem +9

      As soon as I heard this, I realize I only do this when I am trying to be annoying.

  • @jonathanseagraves8140
    @jonathanseagraves8140 Před rokem +52

    Though I was never consciously aware of ejective consonants, I have previously used them when I was intentionally trying to sound insufferable or obnoxious (as a tool for mockery). It's weird how some things can go completely unnoticed by one area of your mind, while a separate area of your mind, not only understands it, but is actively using it as a communication technique.

  • @zoyadulzura7490
    @zoyadulzura7490 Před rokem +122

    This gives me a new respect for the language in the Avatar movies, and for Paul Former. I didn't know so much care was put into the language construction and usage. The fact that a Na'vi speaker has a specific accent while speaking English is something we don't see in any other movie with a constructed language that I know of. Those little details are what make a universe feel alive.

    • @Man_fay_the_Bru
      @Man_fay_the_Bru Před rokem +4

      Pity the movie is total crap about space hippies🤷‍♂️

    • @benpuljak2304
      @benpuljak2304 Před rokem

      @@Man_fay_the_Bru go watch rambo

    • @DawnDavidson
      @DawnDavidson Před rokem +10

      @@Man_fay_the_Bru but they are very pretty space hippies, with a nifty conlang! 😂

    • @kayzee3595
      @kayzee3595 Před 7 měsíci

      @@Man_fay_the_BruOnly a hippie would think Na’vi are hippie 😂
      Pathetic loser!

  • @1ong1ashes
    @1ong1ashes Před rokem +1027

    I'm a native English speaker, and after experimenting with this, I agree that the click seems to happen when I use hard attack. I think that people do this when speaking formally to keep their words clear, enunciated, sharp, and separate. Otherwise, things tend to run together, take over sort of becomes takeover.

    • @DrGeoffLindsey
      @DrGeoffLindsey  Před rokem +176

      Yes, hard attack is characteristic of 'explanatory' type speech more than conversation. But older folks like me don't use it much.

    • @Whatevsbabes
      @Whatevsbabes Před rokem +2

      Separate has two when I say it.

    • @nepdisc3722
      @nepdisc3722 Před rokem +7

      You had a heart attack!? Are you okay!?!?

    • @dietotaku
      @dietotaku Před rokem +7

      that's what it sounds like to me. hearing all those examples i was like "that's just proper diction..."

    • @unwilling_fan
      @unwilling_fan Před rokem +4

      I did realize I do this most when I'm teaching/tutoring bc I want others to understand me better

  • @abmindprof
    @abmindprof Před 3 lety +65

    Bit' of a sly reference to Tom Scott' who after all makes his own phonetics vids. BTW, using this in my phonetics class!

  • @mayfield3314
    @mayfield3314 Před rokem +24

    Did Geoff just hold his breath long enough to read 2 books? That's impressive.

  • @Veggieman87
    @Veggieman87 Před rokem +150

    This is the kind of content I love: really particular information that I'd likely never ask about, but the presenter (who is likely an expert in the subject) is enthusiastically enjoying sharing this information in a clear, digestible, and relatable and/or silly way. And for some reason, at least in my experience, they're almost always from the UK... I'm sure that's a coincidence, though.

  • @user-xo9ig8kc3u
    @user-xo9ig8kc3u Před 2 lety +632

    I always associated ejectives with relatively obscure languages like Georgian or Chechen, I never realised they were in English.
    I guess I never noticed because they're purely allophonic rather than true phonemes

  • @AB-ft7ng
    @AB-ft7ng Před rokem +248

    Really interesting! Reminds me of the unique sound “sks” makes, like in “masks” or “tasks”. Once you notice it, it’s impossible to ignore 😁

    • @gangstreG123
      @gangstreG123 Před rokem +5

      Probably closer to a glottal flap in that case

    • @JoeJigsy
      @JoeJigsy Před rokem +9

      Or Crisps

    • @AB-ft7ng
      @AB-ft7ng Před rokem +16

      @@JoeJigsy Yeah, kind of similar! “-sks” feels like the throat closes off somewhere, whereas “-sps” is just closing the lips. You can also hold and repeat “-spspsps..” for as long as you can hold a breath unlike “-sks”

    • @JoeJigsy
      @JoeJigsy Před rokem +7

      @@AB-ft7ng I agree, although you can definitely say '-sksks...', but much slower than '-spsps...'!

    • @jorriffhdhtrsegg
      @jorriffhdhtrsegg Před rokem +11

      @@JoeJigsy wasps. Makes a whilsting sound when i say these words

  • @GiraffeFlavoredCondoms
    @GiraffeFlavoredCondoms Před rokem +144

    Thank you for irreversibly altering how my brain perceives my own native language, I will now forever be subconsciously listening to this when people speak to me forever 👍 It's like noticing your accent for the first time. It changes you. Thanks, Scott the Woz for being from Ohio. You're why I noticed how nasally we speak and it has changed me forever.

  • @CherilynQ
    @CherilynQ Před rokem +22

    Non-native English speaker here. I always thought that's how these consonants should be pronounced and that I was just not pronouncing them properly. Thanks so much for this informative and entertaining video!

    • @randomdude4669
      @randomdude4669 Před rokem

      It is, its just not common in American English

  • @BlueTigerRunning
    @BlueTigerRunning Před rokem +100

    I've noticed that I've been doing this in an effort to speak clearer and more concise for people to understand me. I am American, but when I was younger somehow inherited a rapid, less enunciated k's and other letters, kind of ran together, sort of mumbling, my mom said my dad did this, so I feel speaking this way makes it easier to understand English really.

    • @wohdinhel
      @wohdinhel Před rokem +6

      This is definitely a regional thing and by no means universal. Most of my adolescent English was influenced by Appalachian dialects, where consonants are very much *not* heavily emphasized. The only time in which we would have done an ejective k’ is when deliberately enunciating for emphasis.

  • @castelodeossos3947
    @castelodeossos3947 Před rokem +289

    Was once a teacher of English as a Foreign Language and always taught the students the phonemic alphabet to help them improve their pronunciation and work it out by looking at a dictionary. Never noticed the ejective plosives and have now discovered it in my own speech. What appears not to be mentioned in this (as usual) superbly made video is that the ejectives appear always (as far as I can work out) at the end of a word, and may appear even when nothing follows. Eg: 'Let's go for a walk.'

    • @DrGeoffLindsey
      @DrGeoffLindsey  Před rokem +46

      As I show, other languages like Quechua have ejectives at the start of words. And as I say at the end, I think English ejectives may be becoming more common because of glottal stops at the start of the next word. (Very rarely I do hear one inside a word in English.)

    • @thomaswilliams2273
      @thomaswilliams2273 Před rokem +6

      A possible midword example would be indicative.

    • @sKadazhnief
      @sKadazhnief Před rokem +3

      @@thomaswilliams2273 I really don't think 《indicative》 has any ejectives in it, perhaps you are mistaking it for aspiration? if not, perhaps could you be more specific as to where in the word you find the ejective consonant?

    • @thomaswilliams2273
      @thomaswilliams2273 Před rokem +1

      @@sKadazhnief It's just that I believe I have heard the word pronounced with a pause between the c and the I. Not all the time though, but more when it's used in frustration when answering a question.

    • @sKadazhnief
      @sKadazhnief Před rokem +4

      often I find in my own accent, the ejective plosives are far more common before words that have an unwritten initial glottal stop.
      in the coda at the end of a sentence my plosives tend to become unreleased versions (at least in quick speech): [p̚ t̚ k̚]
      lets ɡo to the park ⟨park⟩ [päːk̚]

  • @nedcurfman3486
    @nedcurfman3486 Před rokem +17

    I’m more impressed by your ability to read half of Bone in one breath than the amount of ejective Ks I now notice

  • @DumplingsAunt
    @DumplingsAunt Před rokem +43

    I’ll chime in here as a linguist and 30-year ESL teacher who’s never been overtly aware of these ejectives. Fascinating! I’m also impressed that you collected all those video examples.

  • @ianp7661
    @ianp7661 Před rokem +287

    My partner is from Greece and he likes to repeat this sound when I do it. I had never even noticed I did it until he did.
    I also didn't realise it was an emerging trend. I think it's quite common where I'm from in Manchester, even with the older generations.

  • @whycantiremainanonymous8091
    @whycantiremainanonymous8091 Před 2 lety +136

    Actually, the speakers I know, who have a very pronounced ejective k' (all relatively young Brits), also regularly have it at the very end of a turn of talk, without any vowel, or anything else, for that matter, following it.

    • @DrGeoffLindsey
      @DrGeoffLindsey  Před 2 lety +54

      Sure, that's where it started, and it was rare before vowels. But I think the increase in hard attack has probably increased its use before vowels. It's striking how Margot Robbie uses normal k utterance finally then ejective k' before a vowel.

    • @Pruney-
      @Pruney- Před rokem +5

      Young brit from the north west, didn't even realize I clicked this much. Can't get myself to do a none ejective...

  • @alexisprojects
    @alexisprojects Před rokem +3

    Why is this in my CZcams feed? Why did I watch the whole thing? Why was it so fascinating? Here's a lik'e.

  • @sandroselladore3506
    @sandroselladore3506 Před rokem +6

    I have to appreciate how you clearly did your research to pronounce Valery Moskvin's name. It sounds quite close to how a Russian native would pronounce it. Granted, idk if he's Russian, but with a name like that it's very likely

  • @pie_IRL
    @pie_IRL Před rokem +101

    Wow! Legitimately fascinating. I was having trouble making the /k/ sound but found it far easier if I say "like and". I think the only time I've ever come across ejective consonants in conversation is when someone purposefully stresses the word "nope" and it has the /p/ sound at the end.

    • @sKadazhnief
      @sKadazhnief Před rokem +10

      you probably have come across it, without realisinɡ lol

  • @Konim96
    @Konim96 Před rokem +58

    Thank you so much for this explanation. I am an amateur linguist whose little hobby is going around various IPA lists of other languages on wikipedia and trying to learn how to pronounce those very foreign sounds. I got the hang of the majority of sounds (I think so at least) but the ejective consonants have always escaped me because I could never get any feedback to know if I am doing it right, and your little demonstration here showed me that I've been doing it my entire life with ease, without even knowing it! The more I learn about phonetics and phonology the more I am amazed at how many different sounds we are capable of producing without even realizing it.

    • @sheep4483
      @sheep4483 Před rokem +3

      this reminded me of a while ago, when I was trying to learn to sing a bit, and I kept hearing things like "you need to train to raise your palate," so I assumed I must have been doing it wrong because I would need to train it, I was thinking like "but if I raise it too much it starts to hurt and make me gag, am I supposed to train to stop that from happening to raise it more?" but no I just found it super natural from learning some IPA years earlier so I did it the first time I tried (or maybe I'm just still doing it wrong)

    • @Konim96
      @Konim96 Před rokem +1

      @@sheep4483 Are you referring to the back palate which opens up with nasal sounds? 😁
      If so, I too had no idea I had control over the back palate until I learned how nasal sounds work

  • @coyotech55
    @coyotech55 Před rokem +24

    I'm a native speaker of American English, and I'd never noticed that sound as being a separate sound before, either. But yes, I think your explanation for it is right. We have so many more people doing public speaking now than we used to, with video blogging and podcasts! They have to be careful to be understandable and not run their words together too much. Another sound I'm curious about is way we do 2 "t"s in the middle of the word - button, getting, etc. and why it sounds more like a hard glottal stop in some words like button, and more like a "d" in others - betting vs bedding, for instance. This is probably different in the various accents, but not many English speakers would use an actual "t" sound.

    • @rebeccamay6420
      @rebeccamay6420 Před rokem +1

      Language and pronunciation fascinate me. After watching these and other accent & dialect videos, I became very attuned to the difference between the glottal stop in "button" and the softened T in "butter" and the hard T in "between."

    • @EebstertheGreat
      @EebstertheGreat Před rokem +1

      It's hard to say, because it depends a lot on your accent. In a word like "betting" or "bedding," you might be pronouncing both like [ɾ], an alveolar flap, which is the same sound as in the Spanish word "para." This is common in many parts of the U.S. The reason you (and most people) hear it as a /d/ (rather than a /t/) might be because it is not aspirated. This isn't necessarily exclusive to words spelled with a doubled t or d. Words like "hater" and "glider" are pronounced with that same sound in my dialect (and thus, "trader" and "traitor" are homophones).
      Words like "button" have many possible pronunciations, including with a glottal stop [ʔ] for the t, which is also common in many parts of the U.K. This still isn't only restricted to double t, considering words like "mightn't" and "matins." Most examples do have a double t, because most examples have the inflection or suffix -en, and a final t is typically doubled before an -en (e.g. batten, written).

    • @livrowland171
      @livrowland171 Před 10 měsíci +2

      In RP English we use an 'actual T sound' in betting 🤔

  • @NancyKimShim
    @NancyKimShim Před rokem +14

    I study K’iche’, and as the name of the language suggests, it has a glottal stop k’! It’s a distinct sound that changes the meaning of a word when it’s used rather than a non glottal stop k. When I started learning k’iche’, I had difficulty with the glottal stops. This video helps me reconceptualize how I practice the various glottal stops and electives in the language. My favorite tho is glottal stop q (q’)

  • @elizabethpemberton8445
    @elizabethpemberton8445 Před rokem +40

    I’m an American singer, and have been taught to call these “shadow consonants,” [edit: oops, I meant that the vowel after them is a shadow vowel, my brain is old] along with G, D, B, and M, N, F, and V, mostly. The direction is generally that shadow consonants get a conscious schwa, almost a new syllable, at the end. The point is to make the diction better for the audience, especially in choral settings. For solo singing, of course, they are a bit much, unless you like to sing-ah about the moon-ah and the June-ah and the Spring-ah.

    • @clara_cross
      @clara_cross Před rokem +4

      I'm not trained in singing at all, but I've noticed these, and I've always called them ghost vowels.

    • @polyrhythmia
      @polyrhythmia Před rokem +1

      You hear Bob Seger doing this in the song "Turn the Page-uh".

  • @thekidfromiowa
    @thekidfromiowa Před 3 lety +20

    There's even pharyngelized ejectives like in the extinct Ubykh language which is notorious for it's inventory of consonants.

    • @nohandle508
      @nohandle508 Před rokem +3

      Now I know what I'm reading about at the weekend, thank you!

  • @paulabuls5802
    @paulabuls5802 Před rokem +21

    When I was in middle school I moved to a new city and a new school. I was made fun of because I had a strong ejective K accent. I’m originally from central Texas. It’s good to finally learn what this is called. FYI, I also have a strong pin-pen merge which my wife finds hugely amusing!

    • @adampope5107
      @adampope5107 Před rokem +5

      I'm from North Carolina and my pen and pin have no difference. It drives my wife, who's from Chicago, crazy.

    • @paulabuls5802
      @paulabuls5802 Před rokem +6

      @@adampope5107 my wife is from Ohio. She made fun of my pin-pen merger until I discovered that she pronounces wolf with out sounding the L. She pronounces it “woof”. We both have a better respect for each other’s regional dialects now. 🙂

    • @samuraitoaster
      @samuraitoaster Před rokem +2

      @@paulabuls5802I’m from the Seattle area, married a Texan and moved to Texas. I’ll never forget one time asking my mother in law if she had a pen I could borrow, she goes “A what?” Me: “a pen?” Her: “I don’t understand what you’re saying” Me:“ P. E. N…PEN” and she goes “ OHHH!!! A PIIIIIIIN!” 😂. What makes me laugh the most is that I have no idea what she could’ve thought I was saying or if it sounded like gibberish? I have no clue lol

    • @adampope5107
      @adampope5107 Před rokem +1

      @@samuraitoaster maybe she thought you were saying pan funny and was confused?

    • @loopbraider
      @loopbraider Před 22 dny +1

      @@samuraitoaster Your "pen" probably sounded something like "pan" to her!

  • @jamiemason943
    @jamiemason943 Před rokem +8

    I first noticed the sharply enunciated “K” sound while listening Karl Pilkington.
    I then started noticing it with a few other British actors and thought it was due to dialect of where the people were from in certain parts of Britain.
    I really enjoy your videos and was so excited to know that this is a thing and has a name! Thank you

    • @star_fossil
      @star_fossil Před rokem +1

      "Manc"

    • @SpareSomeChange8080
      @SpareSomeChange8080 Před rokem

      "head like a f'king orange", I can certainly here it

    • @kchodron406
      @kchodron406 Před rokem +1

      That's interesting because I grew up near Manchester and I was surprised to discover that it was anything noteworthy 😅. We also replace 't' with a 'k' sometimes, eg pronouncing hospital as 'ospikal. (We never pronounce 'h' at the beginning of a word).

  • @XerxesTexasToast
    @XerxesTexasToast Před 3 lety +59

    The professor giving the speech and using the little pop when saying "up" instantly reminded me of a Game Grumps joke about the same pop, and then I tested it out and it CLICKED! (heh) You really do close the glottis whenever you make sounds like these!

    • @danielsebald5639
      @danielsebald5639 Před 2 lety

      Fancy seeing you here!

    • @LukeZuniga
      @LukeZuniga Před 2 lety +2

      what was the context for the joke? I love Game Grumps

    • @dwoktheraynejonsohn4849
      @dwoktheraynejonsohn4849 Před rokem +2

      @@LukeZuniga Dan asked Arin if he would still be his friend if he enunciated the "p" sound in every word that has it. During the sonic heroes playthrough

  • @vacafuega
    @vacafuega Před rokem +47

    Have spent years talking English with people for whom it is a second language, so over the years my natural speech patterns have wound up much clearer and stronger than they started out, as i've strived to be easier to understand. So a lot like your previous video ending, actually! I reckon the massive rise of communication via conference calls must be causing a shift towards increasingly marked pronunciation, as people try to make themselves understood through compression and audio artefacts.

    • @tinfoilhomer909
      @tinfoilhomer909 Před rokem +3

      If you're interested in dialect levelling there are papers on the Antarctic accent.

    • @dianeshelton9592
      @dianeshelton9592 Před rokem +4

      And masks, we must indeed have learnt to speak differently , especially those in the Nhs and care indusdutry who spent the last 2 years wearing a mask for up to 12 hours a day.

    • @brentwalker3300
      @brentwalker3300 Před rokem

      Good point.

  • @ZealotScript
    @ZealotScript Před rokem +1

    I've no idea why the algorithm recommended me this video, but that was fascinating!

  • @wojciechgrodnicki6302
    @wojciechgrodnicki6302 Před rokem +11

    These are fascinating videos. Never considered that clicking sounds exist in English. I've heard them in Xhosa and Swahili but never detected them in English before this. Mind blown.

    • @gwen6622
      @gwen6622 Před rokem +2

      as he says in the video, it's not a click, it's an ejective. the clicks in xhosa are different than these sounds, and swahili does not have clicks or ejectives. clicks and ejectives are different, separate things

    • @wojciechgrodnicki6302
      @wojciechgrodnicki6302 Před rokem

      @@gwen6622 I stand corrected about the ejective.

  • @Richard-zm6pt
    @Richard-zm6pt Před rokem +52

    I am not aware of using ejectives, but people have told me I do and asked me why. In my case, it is especially true of the k'. I'm an American, but I've had exposure to a lot of English dialects by moving around throughout my life. I have my own blend of features. I just found your channel and have been enjoying and learning from every video. Thank you for publishing.

  • @danil3ddozer
    @danil3ddozer Před 2 lety +13

    I’ve subscribed to your channel in just 20 seconds. Thanks for reading a Russian name with Russian accent and the T-shirt is super amazing

  • @Jabullz
    @Jabullz Před rokem +1

    Watched for the info, WAS SHOCKED when the Bone book came up! I haven't seen that comic in years. I loved them.

  • @MooTV
    @MooTV Před rokem +1

    I'm not going to be able to unhear that clicking sound now that you've pointed it out

  • @TheSonicShoe
    @TheSonicShoe Před rokem +21

    I've always been at least partially aware of these sounds, and I've always sort of thought of them as verbal punctuation. I typically use them at the ends of sentences, or when I really want to emphasize the importance of a certain word in a sentence.

  • @t.c.bramblett617
    @t.c.bramblett617 Před rokem +9

    Thanks for mentioning this phenomenon that I have noticed ever since I visited Georgia 20 years ago and learned Georgian from native speakers. As ejective consonants are contrastive phonemes in their language, they noticed and pointed out when I was doing it inaccurately at the end of their words! Then I realized it was a regular feature of my speech, and I haven't read any linguistic treatment of it since then.

  • @WindInMyWings
    @WindInMyWings Před rokem

    The fact the first example was a clip from Citation Needed / Tom Scott warms my heart

  • @starry_lis
    @starry_lis Před 2 lety +13

    THANK YOU, I CAN FINALLY PRONOUNCE GEORGIAN!

  • @pseudonym1337
    @pseudonym1337 Před rokem +25

    Incredibly fascinating- I had heard this before but never noticed it. In the dialect of American English I speak & most often hear spoken, our final stops are invariably very weak, almost unreleased.

    • @nckoes
      @nckoes Před rokem +1

      New England? We drop our Ts and Rs like crazy. I'm realizing that I use the K.

    • @pseudonym1337
      @pseudonym1337 Před rokem +2

      @@nckoes West Coast- I don't think anyone uses this ejective K here but now I'll be on the lookout

  • @darthryking
    @darthryking Před rokem +2

    Oh wow. Years ago I attempted to learn Na'vi and I could never figure out how to consciously control my pronunciation of the ejective consonants (which the language does distinguish from non-ejectives). Now after all these years this video made me finally get it.

  • @AnkerPeet
    @AnkerPeet Před rokem +4

    I used to live in Peru and picked up on a few Quecha words and phrases. I never realized we make those sounds in English too.
    Thanks for the content!

  • @bernadmanny
    @bernadmanny Před rokem +11

    As someone who loves trivia and esoterica the was wonderful. I also appreciate that you use humour in your instruction as learning doesn't need to be dry and serious to be 'good' teaching.

  • @embryomystic
    @embryomystic Před rokem +6

    I NEVER NOTICED THIS! And now I'm going to hear it every time someone does it. I've always had a hard time producing ejectives (I don't speak any languages that have them as contrastive phonemes, but I've read about some and tried to make the sounds).

  • @mjwemdee
    @mjwemdee Před rokem +18

    Amazing stuff. As a singing teacher I'm very aware of glottal stops and what their value is in interpreting a lyric (and more importantly when singers should try to minimise them) but this video about ejectives is just mind-blowing!

  • @kilgoretrout321
    @kilgoretrout321 Před rokem

    I noticed UK English speakers doing that a lot from watching CZcams. It adds a deliberate rhythm and emphasis to the mood of the speaker.

  • @abluecassette
    @abluecassette Před rokem +10

    A friend linked me here and really enjoyed it, I love your sense of humour. I'm from South Australia and I use the ejective K sometimes, never realised what it was or why I do it! Wow at that lecturer using the trifecta haha.

  • @Zenithell
    @Zenithell Před rokem +3

    This makes me think about how, at least in American English, we often place a glottal stop right before a vowel if it is the first word in a sentence. (At least, in my dialect - I've not studied it much for others)
    I think ejective consonants are very neat, so thank you for the informative video!

  • @L8rCloud
    @L8rCloud Před rokem

    It’s great to see people working on their pronunciation. People today are LAZY in thought, action, grammar, spelling and speech.
    We all have a duty to strive for excellence. It was excellence that gave us all we have today and a lot of things we take for granted came with other people’s great sacrifice.

  • @parryyotter
    @parryyotter Před rokem +1

    I will never unhear this now.

  • @bloosy1771
    @bloosy1771 Před rokem +5

    This is the first video of yours that I have watched and it's totally fascinating. I'll be watching more! I love linguistics even though I've never studied it. It's so interesting that technically it doesn't matter whether (as English speakers) we use the ejective or not, and we probably make the sound (and listen to others making it too) without consciously knowing about it. Whereas I guess with the other languages mentioned, it actually does matter.

  • @GeorgiusNL
    @GeorgiusNL Před rokem +7

    I live in the eastern Netherlands and my family speaks Achterhoeks, a dialect of Dutch Low Saxon. I believe I've heard ejective consonants in Achterhoeks and other Low Saxon dialects as well (if not mistaken for aspirated consonants or something else)

  • @pubfixture
    @pubfixture Před rokem +1

    After your intro, while describing the glottal stop with the MRI image you say, "pocket". Then I realized "pocket" might be the perfect example, as you can speak the entire word in this way without breathing.

  • @hem88971hem
    @hem88971hem Před rokem

    Awesome video! Thank you for teaching us

  • @SavageBear_YT
    @SavageBear_YT Před rokem +4

    Hey, this was my first video of yours and I absolutely love it. Linguistics is becoming a favourite subject of mine, and your content explains things beautifully. The clip from Glasgow Uni was amazing too. Thanks for the video!

  • @ynazbazi9003
    @ynazbazi9003 Před 3 lety +7

    Best existing video on ejectives! Thank you.

  • @dovebair
    @dovebair Před rokem

    Very cool! Great explanation!

  • @gwenmarcus3389
    @gwenmarcus3389 Před rokem +1

    Fascinating.
    This video was made 2 years ago. I am excited to go back and watch all your videos. Thank you for taking your time to share your knowledge. You have such an organized and clear style.

  • @ejdaly1993
    @ejdaly1993 Před rokem +15

    As a native English speaker I never realised this was a thing. While watching I was convinced I couldn’t do it at all until you started explaining hard attacks then I realised that it did naturally happen for me with most of the example phrases. Mind blown 🤯 Thank you for such an interesting video!

  • @ItoeKobayashi
    @ItoeKobayashi Před rokem +8

    This was the clearest explanation I've ever heard for the use of ejectives in English. Thank you! I'm finally able to really notice the difference!

  • @sleepykoinu
    @sleepykoinu Před rokem +2

    I don't know why CZcams decided to recommend me this but it was fascinating. I'd never noticed the sound before and now I hear it very clearly. I like your sense of humor too.

  • @tturner0051
    @tturner0051 Před rokem +1

    Never heard this before, & now I cant unhear it. Thanks 🤣🤣

  • @FahboyMan2549
    @FahboyMan2549 Před rokem +3

    As a non-native speaker, I was tought since elementary that I have to half-repeat the consonant sound after an English word. Everyone was kinda joking about it (we don't have this in my native language). Today I learn there is a name for that sound. Thank you.

  • @pacifique73
    @pacifique73 Před rokem +3

    I first came to remark some ticking sounds in some native languages in Guatemala. Now I understand a little bit more on how those sounds are made and it's very instructive. I'll be more aware of them in english speaking thanks to you. Very intresting video.

  •  Před rokem

    Ah, depth! Delighted to've encountered this channel :)

  • @stuchly1
    @stuchly1 Před 6 měsíci

    This landed in my recommendations and I'm really happy! Great work!

  • @vickykourbatova5433
    @vickykourbatova5433 Před rokem +3

    I took a phonetics class and was really confused by ejectives because I was never able to produce them on purpose. When you said that they were usually formed in English before glottal stops at the beginning of a word, I tried that and was immediately able to produce and then isolate all three. Thank you!

  • @Fledermausmann
    @Fledermausmann Před rokem +15

    Probably a bad time to note that Special K refers to Ketamine in some places... Also surprised that Dr Lindsay didn't use Alan Rickman as an example since he was fairly famous for using ejectives in his speech!!

  • @MichiaLatia
    @MichiaLatia Před rokem

    I love your videos because they are both detailed and insightful for those familiar with the subject matter and those who are not so. Thanks a lot!!

  • @darkJohnSmith
    @darkJohnSmith Před rokem

    Your videos are fascinating. Understanding pronunciation facilitates speaking other languages correctly, as well as understanding my own.
    I appreciate the educational value of this channel. Thank you.

  • @juana343
    @juana343 Před 3 lety +5

    Amazing, fun and as clear as water !!! There is so much to learn on your videos:) I`m sharing it on Fb so that it keeps going
    Thank you Geoff!!

  • @tetramur8969
    @tetramur8969 Před rokem +4

    I'm a non-native English speaker (my native language is Russian) and I noticed like a long time ago that I make an ejective "k" before "a" (like "u" in "cup") consistently. Very interesting video, I would like to see more videos about English

  • @creounity
    @creounity Před rokem

    Informative and really useful video, thank you!

  • @pedrooliveira3486
    @pedrooliveira3486 Před rokem

    Your work is a treasure. I really appreciate your videos. That was A Lesson.

  • @kstar1489
    @kstar1489 Před rokem +8

    As a completely native speaker I never noticed this as something distinct until this video, probably because it’s so normal to me I didn’t even think about it as something other than pronouncing the word lol. now I don’t know if I’ll ever not notice it haha

  • @nefertitimontoya
    @nefertitimontoya Před 2 lety +4

    This video just helped me so much studying for a production test! Thanks so much

  • @larrykinglk
    @larrykinglk Před 6 měsíci +1

    I would love to properly listen to my own French language and learn from it through lessons of this quality!

  • @CatFish107
    @CatFish107 Před rokem +2

    So happy to have stumbled on this channel! I learned today the name of part of what was missing from my warped accent. Canadian who worked with many Brits and Aussies, resulting in some kind of strange accent not native to anywhere. Ejective consonants feel difficult for me to pronounce.

  • @MichaelYutsis
    @MichaelYutsis Před rokem +5

    There are a lot of ejective stops in languages around Caucasus. For example, in the Georgian dish _khachapuri_ , _ch_ and _p_ are originally ejective. But I never knew they may occur in English, thank you very much!

  • @belfastulster5838
    @belfastulster5838 Před 3 lety +13

    Amazing video!!! because of you I bought the book "English After RP", could you please make a video on the fleece diphthong?

    • @DrGeoffLindsey
      @DrGeoffLindsey  Před 3 lety +8

      Thank you, Bryan! Yes, FLEECE is tricky and deserves a video for sure.

  • @kyratejerozumeta9634
    @kyratejerozumeta9634 Před rokem +2

    I have discovered you some days ago and as retired English teacher I am astonished and amused at the same time, and every day I watch one of your videos. They make me think of my phonetics class when studying English Philology in Salamanca. My teacher was a horrible man and a worse teacher!!!! I am having a great time now with your excellent videos and make me feel young ,happy and motivated to go on learning
    Thank you for your great job and your excellent lessons.
    Greetings from Spain.

  • @ZoromeLV
    @ZoromeLV Před 11 měsíci

    A colleague shared this video to me and I'm so grateful they did. Thank you for putting together all those clips to so clearly show the phenomenon of ejectives. I feel much wiser!

  • @billyboh78
    @billyboh78 Před rokem +13

    I'm from Italy, I've been learning and using English for the last 25 years and I've discovered today with your video that I always use the " k' " at the end of a word before another one starting with a vowel... and I have no idea why, since I've never even noticed it. Thank you :)

  • @daveE5000
    @daveE5000 Před 2 lety +14

    Aha! I'd been trying to work out why some of my final plosives sound "funny" - it turns out that I use these ejective consonants regularly in words like "mop" and "clock" at the end of a sentence and some other contexts. In fact, if saying the word on its own, it takes some effort for me not to do that.

    • @almostfm
      @almostfm Před rokem +1

      I spent 10 years in radio, and I've actually softened all my plosives to the point that I can't add them back in without working at it. (One of the things with working close to a microphone is that any plosives you make anywhere in a word jump out at you when you hear them.

  • @Putcha9
    @Putcha9 Před rokem

    I learned so much from this video, thank you so much!!

  • @giovanniamy6466
    @giovanniamy6466 Před rokem

    Wow, so glad I found your channel! Subscribed👍

  • @BunniBeshara
    @BunniBeshara Před rokem +5

    This was something we were forced to do in concert choir, I don’t think I’ll ever be able to stop doing it. Lol 😂

  • @kamranm946
    @kamranm946 Před rokem +7

    the epiglottal ejective /ʡ'/ is the best sound in the history of the universe, they need to add it to Esperanto so it doesn't go extinct

  • @jasonxhx7854
    @jasonxhx7854 Před rokem +2

    I'm from the Midwest US and we HATE glottal stops. We don't have time for all that. We pronounce Winter as "winner". We even have some rare instances where we ADD syllables to words, making them *longer*, but easier and faster to pronounce. We say Nuke-U-ler instead of Nuke-le-er so we don't have to stop at the hard k' sound.

  • @Myriako
    @Myriako Před rokem

    Thank you for this video! 😀💐

  • @ch3ru
    @ch3ru Před rokem +6

    Fascinating! I rarely hear this in American English, and thinking about it it sounds like a particularly annoying or condescending affectation when I do 😅

    • @mondoshiwan
      @mondoshiwan Před rokem +1

      Yeah, when I'm angry, I use it to give misophonic people the itch.