laryngealized
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From laryngeal + -ize + -ed.
Adjective
[edit]laryngealized (comparative more laryngealized, superlative most laryngealized)
- (linguistics, phonetics) Pronounced with or through constriction or other action of the larynx; creaky.
- 1971, Peter Ladefoged, Preliminaries to Linguistic Phonetics[1], page 15:
- In these words, as in similar forms in related Chadic languages, laryngealized voicing is often audible in the adjacent vowels
- 2007, Anton Batliner, Richard Huber, “Speaker characteristics and emotion classification”, in Christian Müller, editor, Speaker Classification I[2], page 143:
- It is well known that back vowels such as [ɑ] tend to be more laryngealized than front vowels such as [i] (local phenomenon).
Verb
[edit]laryngealized
- simple past and past participle of laryngealize