In the Hawaiian language, the okina is a symbol that represents a glottal stop. The symbol is commonly used in Hawaiian words and is found in other Polynesian languages as well under different names.
o > is also rare. * Vowels do not appear word-initially but may be preceded by a glottal stop ' >. * In Island and Downriver Halkomelem, stress usually appears on the first vowel other than i > and ...
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The ‘okina, a diacritical mark in the Hawaiian language, is a glottal stop. It can be seen in some local spellings of the ...
Take the letter “H” as an example. The name of the letter sounds like “eich”, but the sound the letter makes on its own is a voiceless glottal fricative. (A breathy sound.) The two sounds are not ...
Milroy, James Milroy, Lesley Hartley, Sue and Walshaw, David 1994. Glottal stops and Tyneside glottalization: Competing patterns of variation and change in British ...
o > is also rare. * Vowels do not appear word-initially but may be preceded by a glottal stop ' >. * In Island and Downriver Halkomelem, stress usually appears on the first vowel other than i > and ...