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Click consonant



 
 
Clicks are speech sounds such as English tsk! tsk! used to express disapproval, or the tchick! used to spur on a horse. In many languages of southern Africa, and in three languages of East Africa, they are ordinary consonants, found for example in the name of the language Xhosa
Xhosa language

Xhosa is one of the official languages of South Africa. Xhosa is spoken by approximately Xhosa, or about 18% of the South African population. Like most Bantu languages, Xhosa is a Tone , that is, the same sequence of consonants and vowels can have different meanings when said with a rising or falling or high or low intonation....
. Clicks are best known in the West through the 1980 film The Gods Must Be Crazy
The Gods Must Be Crazy

The Gods Must Be Crazy is a film released in 1980, written and directed by Jamie Uys. Set in Botswana and South Africa, it tells the story of Xi, a Bushmen of the Kalahari Desert whose tribe has no knowledge of the world beyond....
. In 2003 clicks were in the news with an announcement that the original human language may have had clicks, but most linguists consider that to be utter speculation.

Technically, clicks are obstruent
Obstruent

An obstruent is a consonant sound formed by obstructing airflow, causing increased air pressure in the vocal tract. In phonetics, Manner of articulation may be divided into two large classes, obstruents and sonorants....
s articulated with two closures (points of contact) in the mouth, one forward and one at the back.






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Clicks are speech sounds such as English tsk! tsk! used to express disapproval, or the tchick! used to spur on a horse. In many languages of southern Africa, and in three languages of East Africa, they are ordinary consonants, found for example in the name of the language Xhosa
Xhosa language

Xhosa is one of the official languages of South Africa. Xhosa is spoken by approximately Xhosa, or about 18% of the South African population. Like most Bantu languages, Xhosa is a Tone , that is, the same sequence of consonants and vowels can have different meanings when said with a rising or falling or high or low intonation....
. Clicks are best known in the West through the 1980 film The Gods Must Be Crazy
The Gods Must Be Crazy

The Gods Must Be Crazy is a film released in 1980, written and directed by Jamie Uys. Set in Botswana and South Africa, it tells the story of Xi, a Bushmen of the Kalahari Desert whose tribe has no knowledge of the world beyond....
. In 2003 clicks were in the news with an announcement that the original human language may have had clicks, but most linguists consider that to be utter speculation.

Technically, clicks are obstruent
Obstruent

An obstruent is a consonant sound formed by obstructing airflow, causing increased air pressure in the vocal tract. In phonetics, Manner of articulation may be divided into two large classes, obstruents and sonorants....
s articulated with two closures (points of contact) in the mouth, one forward and one at the back. The pocket of air enclosed between is rarefied
Rarefaction

Rarefaction is the reduction of a medium's density, or the opposite of Physical compression.A natural example of this is as a Phase in a sound wave or phonon....
 by a sucking action of the tongue. (That is, clicks have a velaric/lingual ingressive airstream mechanism.) The forward closure is then released, producing what may be the loudest consonants in the language, although in some languages such as Hadza
Hadza language

Hadza is a language isolate spoken by fewer than a thousand people along the shores of Lake Eyasi in Tanzania. Despite the small number of speakers, language use is vigorous, with most children learning it....
, clicks can be more subtle and may even be mistaken for ejective stops
Ejective consonant

In phonetics, ejective consonants are voiceless consonants that are pronounced with simultaneous closure of the glottis. In the phonology of a particular language, ejectives may contrast with aspiration or tenuis consonants....
.

What clicks sound like

For several sound samples see articles bilabial click
Bilabial click

The bilabial clicks are a family of click consonants found as phonemes only in the Tuu languages, in the language of Botswana, in a single word in Hadza language, and in the Damin ritual jargon of Australia....
, dental click
Dental click

The dental clicks are a family of click consonants found, as constituents of words, only in Africa and in the Damin ritual jargon of Australia....
, lateral click, palatal click
Palatal click

The palato-alveolar clicks are a family of click consonants found only in Africa. They are commonly called palatal clicks.The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents the forward articulation of these sounds is ....
, and alveolar click.


There are five places of articulation at which click consonants occur. In IPA, a click is symbolized by placing the assigned symbol for the place of click articulation to the left of a symbol for a nonclick sound at the same place of articulation.

  • The easiest clicks for English speakers are the dental click
    Dental click

    The dental clicks are a family of click consonants found, as constituents of words, only in Africa and in the Damin ritual jargon of Australia....
    s written with a single pipe, . They are all sharp (high-pitched) squeaky sounds made by sucking on the front teeth. A simple dental click is used in English to express pity or to shame someone, and sometimes to call an animal, and is written tsk!


  • Next most familiar to English speakers are the lateral clicks written with a double pipe, . They are also squeaky sounds, though less sharp than , made by sucking on the molars on either side (or both sides) of the mouth. A simple lateral click is made in English to get a horse moving, and is conventionally written tchick!


  • Then there are the bilabial click
    Bilabial click

    The bilabial clicks are a family of click consonants found as phonemes only in the Tuu languages, in the language of Botswana, in a single word in Hadza language, and in the Damin ritual jargon of Australia....
    s, written with a bull's eye, . These are lip-smacking sounds, but without the pursing of the lips found in a kiss.


The above clicks sound like affricates, in that they involve a lot of friction. The other two families are more abrupt sounds that do not have this friction.

  • With the alveolar clicks, written with an exclamation mark, , the tip of the tongue is pulled down abruptly and forcefully from the roof of the mouth, sometimes using a lot of jaw motion, and making a hollow pop! like a cork being pulled from an empty bottle. These sounds can be quite loud.


  • Finally, the palatal click
    Palatal click

    The palato-alveolar clicks are a family of click consonants found only in Africa. They are commonly called palatal clicks.The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents the forward articulation of these sounds is ....
    s, , are made with a flat tongue, and are softer popping sounds than the clicks.


Languages with clicks

Clicks occur in all three Khoisan language families
Khoisan languages

The Khoisan languages are the click languages of Africa which do not belong to other language families. They include languages indigenous to southern and eastern Africa, though some such, as the Khoi languages, appear to have moved to their current locations not long before the Bantu expansion....
 of southern Africa, where they may be the most numerous consonants. To a lesser extent they are found in several neighbouring Bantu languages
Bantu languages

The Bantu languages constitute a grouping belonging to the Niger-Congo languages family. This grouping is deep down in the genealogical tree of the Bantoid grouping, which in turn is deep down in the Niger-Congo tree....
 which borrowed them
Sprachbund

A Sprachbund , from the German language word for ?language union?, also known as a linguistic area, convergence area, diffusion area or language crossroads, is a group of languages that have become similar in some way because of geographical proximity and language contact....
 from Khoisan. The most famous of these are the languages of the Nguni cluster (Zulu
Zulu language

Zulu , is a language of the Zulu people with about 10 million speakers, the vast majority of whom live in South Africa. Zulu is the most widely spoken home language in South Africa as well as being understood by over 50% of the population ....
, Xhosa
Xhosa language

Xhosa is one of the official languages of South Africa. Xhosa is spoken by approximately Xhosa, or about 18% of the South African population. Like most Bantu languages, Xhosa is a Tone , that is, the same sequence of consonants and vowels can have different meanings when said with a rising or falling or high or low intonation....
, Swazi
Swati language

Swati is a Bantu languages of the Nguni group spoken in Swaziland and South Africa. The number of speakers is estimated to be in the region of 1.5 million....
, Phuthi
Phuthi language

Phuthi is a Nguni Bantu language spoken in southern Lesotho and areas in South Africa adjacent to the same border. The closest substantial living relative of Phuthi is Swati language , spoken in Swaziland and the Mpumalanga province of South Africa....
, Ndebele
Ndebele language

There are at least two languages commonly called Ndebele:*The Northern Ndebele language, a Nguni languages spoken in Zimbabwe*The Southern Ndebele language, classified as Nguni languages or Sotho-Tswana languages, spoken in South Africa, heavily influenced by surrounding Sotho-Tswana languages and therefore mostly classified a...
, and the Zulu-based pidgin
Pidgin

A pidgin is a simplified language that develops as a means of communication between two or more groups that do not have a language in common, in situations such as trade....
 Fanagalo
Fanagalo

Fanagalo or Fanakalo is a pidgin based on the Zulu language, English language, and Afrikaans language languages. It is used as a lingua franca, mainly in the gold, diamond, coal and copper mining industries in South Africa ? and to a smaller extent in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Namibia, Zambia, and Zimbabwe....
); the other Bantu click languages are Sesotho
Sesotho language

Sesotho is a Bantu languages spoken primarily in South Africa, where it is one the official languages of South Africa, and in Lesotho, where it is the national language....
 and the Yeyi
Yeyi language

Yeyi or ShiYeyi is a endangered language Bantu languages spoken by 45,000 people along the Okavango River in Namibia and Botswana. Yeyi, influenced by Ju languages languages, is one of several Bantu languages along the Okavango with clicks....
, Mbukushu
Mbukushu language

Mbukushu or ThiMbukushu is a Bantu language spoken by 45,000 people along the Okavango River in Namibia, where it is a national language; in Botswana; in Angola; and in Zambia, where it is an official regional language....
, Kwangali
Kwangali language

Kwangali, also known as RuKwangali and SiKwangali, is a Bantu language spoken by 85,000 people along the Okavango River in Namibia, where it is a national language, and in Angola....
, and Gciriku
Gciriku language

Gciriku or Diriku is a Bantu language spoken by 305,000 people along the Okavango River in Namibia, where it is a national language, in Botswana, and in Angola....
 languages along the Okavango River
Okavango River

The Okavango River is a river in southwest Africa. It is the fourth-longest river system in southern Africa, running southeastward for 1,600 km ....
 in Angola
Angola

Angola, officially the Republic of Angola , is a country in south-central Africa bordering Namibia to the south, Democratic Republic of the Congo to the north, and Zambia to the east, and with a west coast along the Atlantic Ocean....
, Namibia
Namibia

Namibia, officially the Republic of Namibia, is a country in southern Africa on the Atlantic Ocean coast. It shares borders with Angola and Zambia to the north, Botswana to the east, and South Africa to the south....
, and Botswana
Botswana

The Republic of Botswana , is a landlocked country in Southern Africa. Citizens of Botswana are called "Batswana" , regardless of ethnicity. Formerly a British protectorate of Bechuanaland Protectorate, Botswana adopted its new name after becoming independent within the Commonwealth of Nations on 30 September 1966....
.

There are three small languages in East Africa which use clicks: Sandawe
Sandawe language

Sandawe or Sandawi is a tonal language spoken by about 40,000 Sandawe people in the Dodoma region of Tanzania. Language use is vigorous among both adults and children, with people in some areas monolingual....
 and Hadza
Hadza language

Hadza is a language isolate spoken by fewer than a thousand people along the shores of Lake Eyasi in Tanzania. Despite the small number of speakers, language use is vigorous, with most children learning it....
 of Tanzania
Tanzania

Tanzania , officially the United Republic of Tanzania , is a country in East Africa that is bordered by Kenya and Uganda on the north, Rwanda, Burundi and the Democratic Republic of the Congo on the west, and Zambia, Malawi and Mozambique on the south....
, as well as Dahalo
Dahalo language

Dahalo is an endangered language South Cushitic languages language spoken by at most 400 people on the Kenyan coast near the mouth of the Tana River....
, an endangered South Cushitic language
Cushitic languages

The Cushitic languages are a branch of the Afro-Asiatic languages language family spoken in the Horn of Africa. They are named after the Biblical figure Cush by analogy with Shem being the eponym origin of Semitic languages....
 of Kenya
Kenya

The Republic of Kenya is a country in East Africa. It is bordered by Ethiopia to the north, Somalia to the northeast, Tanzania to the south, Uganda to the west, and Sudan to the northwest, with the Indian Ocean running along the southeast border....
 which has clicks in only a few dozen words. It is thought these may remain from an episode of language shift
Language shift

Language shift, sometimes referred to as language transfer or language replacement or assimilation, is the progressive process whereby a speech community of a language shifts to speaking another language....
.

The only non-African language known to employ clicks as regular speech sounds is Damin
Damin

Damin was a ceremonial language register used by the advanced initiated men of the Lardil and the Yangkaal tribes in Aboriginal Australia....
, a ritual code used by speakers of Lardil in Australia
Australia

Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a country in the southern hemisphere comprising the Australia of the world's smallest continent, the major island of Tasmania, and numerous list of islands of Australia in the Indian Ocean and Pacific Oceans....
. One of the clicks in Damin is actually an egressive click, using the tongue to compress the air in the mouth for an outward (egressive) "spurt".

The Southern African Khoisan languages only utilize root-initial clicks. Hadza, Sandawe, and several of the Bantu languages also allow syllable
Syllable

A syllable is a unit of organization for a sequence of Speech communication sounds. For example, the word water is composed of two syllables: wa and ter....
-initial clicks within roots, but in no known language does a click close a syllable or end a word.

English and many other languages may use clicks in interjection
Interjection

An interjection is a part of speech that usually has no grammatical connection with the rest of the Sentence and simply expresses emotion on the part of the speaker, although most interjections have clear definitions....
s, such as the dental "tsk-tsk" sound used to express disapproval, or the lateral tchick used with horses. In Ningdu Chinese, flapped nasal clicks are used in nursery rhymes, and in Persian
Persian language

name=Persian|nativename=|pronunciation=[f??r'si]|image=|caption=Farsi in Perso-Arabic script |states= Iran, Afghanistan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, and Bahrain....
, Greek
Greek language

Greek is an Indo-European languages native to the southern Balkan peninsula, the language of the Greek people. It forms an independent branch within Indo-European....
 and Maltese
Maltese language

Maltese is the national language of Malta, and a co-official Languages of Malta alongside English language,while also serving as an Languages of the European Union European Union, the only Semitic languages so distinguished....
 a click accompanied by tipping the head upwards signifies "no". Clicks occasionally turn up elsewhere, as in the special register
Register (linguistics)

In linguistics, a register is a subset of a language used for a particular purpose or in a particular social setting. For example, an English language speaker may adhere more closely to prescription and description, pronounce words ending in -ing with a velar nasal and refrain from using the word "ain't" when speaking in a formal setting, bu...
s twins sometimes develop with each other, in ritual codes like Damin
Damin

Damin was a ceremonial language register used by the advanced initiated men of the Lardil and the Yangkaal tribes in Aboriginal Australia....
, and in onomatopoeic usages.

The airstream

The essence of a click is an ingressive airstream mechanism. However, in nasal clicks the nasalization involves a separate nasal airstream, generally pulmonic egressive but occasionally pulmonic ingressive. Similarly, voiced clicks also require a simultaneous pulmonic egressive airstream to power the voiced phonation
Phonation

Phonation has slightly different meanings depending on the subfield of phonetics. Among some phoneticians, phonation is the process by which the vocal folds produce certain sounds through quasi-periodic vibration....
.

The front articulation may be coronal
Coronal

Coronal may refer to:* anything relating to a corona* Coronal loop* In linguistics, coronals refer to coronal consonants.* In zoology, the coronal plane is an anatomical term of location...
 or, more rarely, labial
Labial consonant

Labials are consonants articulated either with both lips or with the lower lip and the upper teeth . English is a bilabial nasal consonant sonorant, and are bilabial stop consonant , and are labiodental fricative consonant....
. The rear articulation has traditionally been thought to be velar
Velar consonant

Velars are consonants articulated with the back part of the tongue against the soft palate, the back part of the roof of the mouth, known also as the Soft palate)....
 or, again more rarely, uvular. However, recent investigation of N|uu has revealed that the supposed velar–uvular distinction is actually one of a simple click versus a click–plosive airstream contour
Contour (linguistics)

In phonetics, contour describes speech sounds which behave as single segment s, but which make an internal transition from one quality, place, or manner to another....
, and that all rear articulations in N|uu are uvular or even pharyngeal
Pharyngeal

The word pharyngeal, meaning to do with the pharynx or throat, may refer to:* Pharynx, for pharyngeal anatomy* Pharyngeal muscles**Superior pharyngeal constrictor muscle...
. Even in languages without such a distinction, such as Xhosa
Xhosa language

Xhosa is one of the official languages of South Africa. Xhosa is spoken by approximately Xhosa, or about 18% of the South African population. Like most Bantu languages, Xhosa is a Tone , that is, the same sequence of consonants and vowels can have different meanings when said with a rising or falling or high or low intonation....
, experiments have shown that when the click release is removed from a recording, the resulting sound is judged to be uvular, not velar. However, it is possible other languages do have a velar articulation.

Since in at least some languages clicks are not velar, some phoneticians have recently come to prefer the term lingual (made with the tongue) as being more accurate for this airstream mechanism than velaric (made with the velum).

Types of clicks

As noted above, clicks necessarily involve at least two closures: an anterior articulation which has traditionally been represented by the special click symbol in the IPA, and a posterior articulation which has been traditionally described as oral or nasal
Nasal consonant

A nasal consonant is produced with a lowered soft palate in the mouth, allowing air to escape freely through the nose. The oral cavity still acts as a resonance chamber for the sound, but the air does not escape through the mouth as it is blocked by the tongue....
, voiced or voiceless, etc. The literature also describes a contrast between velar
Velar consonant

Velars are consonants articulated with the back part of the tongue against the soft palate, the back part of the roof of the mouth, known also as the Soft palate)....
 and uvular
Uvular consonant

Uvulars are consonants articulated with the back of the tongue against or near the Palatine uvula, that is, further back in the mouth than velar consonants....
 rear articulations for some languages. However, recent work has shown that for languages which make this distinction, all clicks have a uvular, or even pharyngeal, rear closure, and that the clicks explicitly described as uvular are in fact clusters/contours of a click plus a pulmonic consonant, in which the clusters/contour has two release bursts, the click itself and then a uvular consonant. In the case of "velar" clicks in these languages, on the other hand, there is only a single release burst, that of the forward click release, and the release of the rear articulation isn't audible.

Nonetheless, in most of the literature the stated place of the click is the anterior articulation (called the release or influx), while the manner is ascribed to the posterior articulation (called the accompaniment or efflux), as in a "nasal dental click".

There are numerous manners of clicks. These include what has been described as voiceless, voiced, aspirate, breathy voiced, nasal, voiceless nasal, breathy voiced nasal, glottalized, voiceless nasal glottalized, affricate, ejective affricate, prevoiced, prenasalized. In a few of the Khoisan languages, clicks cluster with other obstruents. Examples of such clusters in !Xσυ a voiced velar click followed by voiceless affricated ejective, , and a velar ejective click followed by uvular ejective, .

The size of click inventories ranges from as few as three (in Sesotho
Sesotho phonology

The phonology of Sesotho and those of the other Sotho-Tswana languages are radically different from those of "older" or more "stereotypical" Bantu languages....
) or four (in Dahalo
Dahalo language

Dahalo is an endangered language South Cushitic languages language spoken by at most 400 people on the Kenyan coast near the mouth of the Tana River....
), to dozens in the Juu
Ju languages

The Juu languages , also known as the !Kung languages , are a dialect continuum spoken in Botswana, Namibia, and Angola. The form a language family together with the ?H?? language....
 and Tuu languages
Tuu languages

The Tuu or Taa-!Kwi languages are a language family consisting of two language clusters spoken in Botswana and South Africa. The relationship between the two is not doubted, but is not close....
 (Northern and Southern Khoisan). !Xσυ
!Xσυ language

Taa, also known as !X??, is a Khoisan language with a very large number of phonemes , with at least 58 consonants, 31 vowels, and four tones , or at least 87 consonants, 20 vowels, and two tones , by many counts the most of any known language....
, a Tuu language, has fifty click phonemes and over 70% of words in the dictionary of this language begin with a click.

Clicks appear more stop
Stop consonant

A stop, plosive, or occlusive is a consonant sound produced by stopping the airflow in the vocal tract. The terms plosive and stop are usually used interchangeably, but they are not perfect synonyms....
-like or more affricate-like depending on their place of articulation: In southern Africa, clicks involving an apical
Apical consonant

An apical consonant is a Phone produced by obstructing the air passage with the apex of the tongue . This contrasts with laminal consonants, which are produced by creating an obstruction with the blade of the tongue ....
 alveolar
Alveolar consonant

Alveolar consonants are articulated with the tongue against or close to the superior alveolar ridge, which is called that because it contains the Dental alveolus of the superior teeth....
 or laminal
Laminal consonant

A laminal consonant is a Phone produced by obstructing the air passage with the blade of the tongue, which is the flat top front surface just behind the tip of the tongue on the top....
 postalveolar
Postalveolar consonant

Postalveolar consonants are consonants articulated with the tongue near or touching the back of the alveolar ridge, placing them a bit further back in the mouth than the alveolar consonants, which are at the ridge itself, but not as far back as the hard palate ....
 closure are acoustically abrupt and sharp, like stops, while bilabial
Labial consonant

Labials are consonants articulated either with both lips or with the lower lip and the upper teeth . English is a bilabial nasal consonant sonorant, and are bilabial stop consonant , and are labiodental fricative consonant....
, dental
Dental consonant

In linguistics, a dental consonant or dental is a consonant that is articulated with the tongue against the upper teeth, such as , , , and in some languages....
, and lateral
Lateral consonant

Laterals are "L"-like consonants pronounced with an occlusion made somewhere along the axis of the tongue, while air from the lungs escapes at one side or both sides of the tongue....
 clicks typically have longer and acoustically noisier releases that are more like affricates. In East Africa, however, the alveolar clicks tend to be flapped
Flap consonant

In phonetics, a flap or tap is a type of consonantal sound, which is produced with a single contraction of the muscles so that one articulator is thrown against another....
, while the lateral clicks tend to be more sharp and abrupt.

Transcription

The five click releases with dedicated symbols in the International Phonetic Alphabet
International Phonetic Alphabet

The International Phonetic Alphabet "The acronym 'IPA' strictly refers [...] to the 'International Phonetic Association'. But it is now such a common practice to use the acronym also to refer to the alphabet itself that resistance seems pedantic....
 (IPA) are bilabial
Bilabial click

The bilabial clicks are a family of click consonants found as phonemes only in the Tuu languages, in the language of Botswana, in a single word in Hadza language, and in the Damin ritual jargon of Australia....
 , dental
Dental click

The dental clicks are a family of click consonants found, as constituents of words, only in Africa and in the Damin ritual jargon of Australia....
 , palato-alveolar
Palatal click

The palato-alveolar clicks are a family of click consonants found only in Africa. They are commonly called palatal clicks.The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents the forward articulation of these sounds is ....
 or "palatal" , (post)alveolar
Postalveolar click

The alveolar or postalveolar clicks are a family of click consonants found only in Africa and in the Damin ritual jargon of Australia.The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents the forward articulation of these sounds is ....
 or "retroflex" , and alveolar lateral . The retroflex and palatal releases are "abrupt"; that is, they are sharp popping sounds with little frication (turbulent airflow). The bilabial, dental, and lateral releases, on the other hand, are "noisy": they are longer, lip- or tooth-sucking sounds with turbulent airflow, and are sometimes called affricates. (This applies to the forward articulation; both may also have either an affricate or non-affricate rear articulation as well.) The apical
Apical consonant

An apical consonant is a Phone produced by obstructing the air passage with the apex of the tongue . This contrasts with laminal consonants, which are produced by creating an obstruction with the blade of the tongue ....
 releases, and , are sometimes called "grave", because their pitch is dominated by low frequencies; while the laminal
Laminal consonant

A laminal consonant is a Phone produced by obstructing the air passage with the blade of the tongue, which is the flat top front surface just behind the tip of the tongue on the top....
 releases, and , are sometimes called "acute", because they are dominated by high frequencies. (At least in the N|u language, this is associated with a difference in the placement of the rear articulation: "grave" clicks are uvular
Uvular consonant

Uvulars are consonants articulated with the back of the tongue against or near the Palatine uvula, that is, further back in the mouth than velar consonants....
, whereas "acute" clicks are pharyngeal
Pharyngeal consonant

A pharyngeal consonant is a type of consonant which is articulated with the root of the tongue against the pharynx.Pharyngeal consonants in the International Phonetic Alphabet :...
.) Thus the alveolar click sounds something like a cork pulled from a bottle (a low-pitch pop), at least in Xhosa; while the dental click is like English tsk! tsk!, a high-pitched sucking on the incisors. The lateral clicks are pronounced by sucking on the molars of one or both sides. The bilabial click is different from what many people associate with a kiss: the lips are pressed more-or-less flat together, as they are for a [p] or an [m], not rounded as they are for a [w].

The most populous languages with clicks, Zulu and Xhosa, use the letters c, q, x, by themselves and in digraphs
Digraph (orthography)

A digraph, bigraph , or digram is a pair of characters used to write one phoneme or a sequence of phonemes that does not correspond to the normal values of the two characters combined....
, to write click consonants. Most Khoisan languages, on the other hand (with the notable exceptions of Naro
Naro language

Naro is a List of Khoisan languages#Khoe .28or Central Khoisan.29 spoken in the Ghanzi District of Botswana and in eastern Namibia, where it is sometimes called Nharo....
 and Sandawe
Sandawe language

Sandawe or Sandawi is a tonal language spoken by about 40,000 Sandawe people in the Dodoma region of Tanzania. Language use is vigorous among both adults and children, with people in some areas monolingual....
), use a more iconic system based on the pipe
Vertical bar

The vertical bar has various names including the pipe , verti-bar, vbar, stick, vertical line, vertical slash, think colon, or divider line by others....
 <|>. (The exclamation point for the "retroflex" click was originally a pipe with a subscript dot, along the lines of ?, ?, ? used to transcribe the retroflex consonants of India.) At one time, the IPA
International Phonetic Alphabet

The International Phonetic Alphabet "The acronym 'IPA' strictly refers [...] to the 'International Phonetic Association'. But it is now such a common practice to use the acronym also to refer to the alphabet itself that resistance seems pedantic....
 was augmented with a set of Latin-based symbols for clicks, but they were never much used, and were eventually given up for the Khoisanist symbols:

Competing orthographies
bilabialdentalalveolarpalatallateral
Khoisanist
old IPA
Bantu *


* The bilabial and palatal clicks do not occur in written Bantu languages. However, the palatal clicks have been romanized in Naron and Ju|'hυasi, where they are transcribed with tc and η respectively.

There are a few less well attested articulations, such as a noisy laminal denti-alveolar lateral release ( [triple pipe] in an ad hoc transcription), which contrasts with an apical postalveolar lateral in Mangetti Dune !Kung; an abrupt sub-apical retroflex release in Angolan !Kung; and a "slapped" alveolar click in Hadza and Sandawe, where the tongue slaps the bottom of the mouth after the release. (These distinctions may suffice for the Damin releases as well.) However, the Khoisan languages are poorly attested, and it is quite possible that, as they become better described, more click releases will be found.

In the literature, the places not directly supported by the IPA are transcribed with ad hoc digraphs:
Provisional extended click symbols
bilabialdentalalveolarretroflexpalatal
Central
Lateral
Flapped  


Typically when a click consonant is transcribed, two symbols are used, one for each articulation, connected with a tie bar. This is because a click such as has been traditionally been analysed as a nasal velar rear articulation pronounced simultaneously with the forward ingressive release . The symbols may be written in either order, depending on the analysis. However, a tie bar is not often used in practice, and when the manner is a simple [k], it will often be omitted as well. That is, = = = = .

The manner of a click is generally written before the release: or , and this is preferred by the IPA. However, many Khoisanists prefer to write the manner second: or . This is because any diacritics which follow belong to the manner rather than to the forward release, and they are more easily understood when they are made diacritics of the manner. Regardless, elements which do not overlap with the release are always written according to their temporal order: Prenasalization is always written first in = , and the second ejective is always written second in = .

Some linguists analyze clicks as simplex segments, and use superscripts rather than digraphs for the accompaniments. Thus or =

While the SAMPA
SAMPA

The Speech Assessment Methods Phonetic Alphabet is a computer-readable phonetic script using 7-bit printable American Standard Code for Information Interchange characters, based on the International Phonetic Alphabet ....
 encoding for IPA into ASCII
ASCII

American Standard Code for Information Interchange , is a coding standard that can be used for interchanging information, if the information is expressed mainly by the written form of English words....
 doesn't have symbols for transcribing clicks, the proposed X-SAMPA
X-SAMPA

The Extended Speech Assessment Methods Phonetic Alphabet is a variant of SAMPA developed in 1995 by John C. Wells, professor of phonetics at the University of London....
 standard does: O\, |\, |\|\, =\, and !. Some instead suggest ||\, #\ or "\ for the alveolar lateral click. The Kirshenbaum
Kirshenbaum

Kirshenbaum, sometimes called ASCII-IPA or erkIPA, is a system used to represent the International Phonetic Alphabet in ASCII. It was developed for Usenet, notably the newsgroups sci.lang and alt.usage.english....
 system uses a different method: clicks are denoted by digraphs, with the click symbol (always "!") added to the stop homorganic to the release, but with the manner of the accompaniment. For example, /t!/ is a voiceless dental click, and /m!/ is a nasal bilabial click. (This transcription is used in the literature on Damin.) However, the International Phonetic Association recommends using the IPA symbols in Unicode
Unicode

Unicode is a computing industry standard allowing computers to consistently represent and manipulate Character expressed in most of the world's writing systems....
, or using the number codes which they have assigned to each symbol.

Places of articulation

These are often called click types, releases, or influxes. There are seven or eight known releases, not counting slapped or egressive clicks. These are bilabial affricated , or "bilabial"; laminal denti-alveolar affricated , or "dental"; apical (post)alveolar plosive , or "alveolar"; laminal postalveolar (palato-alveolar) plosive , or "palatal"; subapical postalveolar (retroflex
Retroflex click

The retroflex clicks are a family of click consonants found only in Juu languages of southern Africa and in the Damin ritual jargon of Australia....
)
(in central Ju); and two lateral clicks, which in the only dialects known to distinguish them (northern Ju) are laminal denti-alveolar lateral with a forward release, and apical postalveolar lateral with a rear release. There may be an additional palatal lateral click (a palatal click with a lateral release), provisionally transcribed , in another Ju lect which is currently (2008) being investigated. Given the poor state of documentation of Khoisan languages, it is quite possible that additional releases will turn up. However, no language is known to contrast more than five places of articulation.

Click release
inventory
Languages
Dahalo
Sesotho
Sandawe, Hadza, Xhosa, Zulu (in Hadza and sometimes Sandawe, ! is "slapped";
Hadza also has a single word with )
Korana, Nama, Yeyi, Zhu|'hυasi (southeastern Ju)
!Kung (Grootfontein)
?Hυγ, N|u, |Xam, !Xσυ
!Kung (Angola)
Damin


Extra-linguistically, Coatlαn Zapotec
Coatlαn Zapotec language

Coatl?n Zapotec is an Oto-Manguean languages language of the Zapotecan languages branch, spoken in southern Oaxaca, Mexico. The Ethnologue counts 500 speakers....
 uses a linguolabial click, , as mimesis for a pig drinking water.

Names found in the literature


The terms for the click releases were originally developed by Bleek in 1911. Since then there has been some conflicting variation. Here are the terms used in some of the main references.

Click release Bantu letters Also known as:  
c dental affricative/affricated/with friction; alveolar affricated; denti-alveolar; apico-lamino-dental; denti-pharyngeal
palato-alveolar; alveolar; alveolar instantaneous; denti-alveolar implosive; palato-pharyngeal
q cerebral; (post-) alveolar implosive; palato-alveolar; palato-alveolar instantaneous; palatal; palatal retroflex; apico-palatal; central alveo-uvular
x lateral affricative/with friction; alveolar lateral affricated; post-alveolar lateral; lateral apico-alveo-palatal; lateral alveo-uvular


The back-vowel constraint

In several languages, including Nama and Ju|’hoansi, the alveolar and lateral clicks only occur, or preferentially occur, before back vowel
Back vowel

A back vowel is a type of vowel sound used in some spoken languages. The defining characteristic of a back vowel is that the tongue is positioned as far back as possible in the mouth without creating a constriction that would be classified as a consonant....
s, while the dental and palatal clicks may occur before any vowel. The effect is most noticeable with the high front vowel . In Nama, for example, the diphthong is common but is rare after alveolar clicks, whereas the opposite is true after dental and palatal clicks. This is a common effect of uvular
Uvular consonant

Uvulars are consonants articulated with the back of the tongue against or near the Palatine uvula, that is, further back in the mouth than velar consonants....
 or uvularized consonants on vowels in both click and non-click languages. In Taa, for example, the back-vowel constraint is triggered by both alveolar clicks and uvular stops, but not by palatal clicks or velar stops: sequences such as and are rare to non-existent, whereas sequences such as and are common.

Miller et al. (2003) used ultrasound imaging to show that the rear articulation of the alveolar clicks in Nama is substantially different that that of palatal and dental clicks. Specifically, the shape of the body of the tongue in palatal clicks is very similar to that of the vowel , and involves the same tongue muscles, so that sequences such as involved a simple and quick transition. The rear articulation of the alveolar clicks, however, is several centimeters further back, and involves a different set of muscles in the uvular region. The part of the tongue required to approach the palate for the vowel is deeply retracted in , as it lies at the bottom of the air pocket used to create the vacuum required for click airstream. This makes the transition required for much more complex and the timing more difficult than the shallower and more forward tongue position of the palatal clicks. Consequently, takes 50 ms longer to pronounce than , the same amount of time required to pronounce .

Manners of articulation

(Data is primarily from Ladefoged; see references at individual language articles.)

Click manners are often called click accompaniments or effluxes, but both terms have met with objections on theoretical grounds.

There is a great variety of click manners, both simplex and complex, the latter variously analysed as consonant clusters
Consonant cluster

In linguistics, a consonant cluster is a group of consonants which have no intervening vowel. In English, for example, the groups and are consonant clusters in the word splits....
 or contour
Contour (linguistics)

In phonetics, contour describes speech sounds which behave as single segment s, but which make an internal transition from one quality, place, or manner to another....
s. With so few click languages, and so little study of them, it is also unclear to what extent clicks in different languages are equivalent. For example, the of Nama, of Sandawe, and of Hadza may be essentially the same phone, as may and ; no one language distinguishes either set, and the differences in transcription may have more to do with the approach of the linguist than with actual differences in the sounds.

Some Khoisan languages are typologically
Linguistic typology

Linguistic typology is a subfield of linguistics that studies and classifies languages according to their structural features. Its aim is to describe and explain the structural diversity of the world's languages....
 unusual in allowing mixed voicing
Phonation

Phonation has slightly different meanings depending on the subfield of phonetics. Among some phoneticians, phonation is the process by which the vocal folds produce certain sounds through quasi-periodic vibration....
 in non-click consonant clusters/contours, such as , so it is not surprising that they would allow mixed voicing in clicks as well.

There is ongoing discussion as to which clicks are best analysed as consonant clusters. For example, some linguists feel that ejective clicks are not possible, and indeed in many Khoisan languages they appear to be clusters. However, in other languages, phonetic measurements have found that, although the ejective release follows the click release, it is the rear closure of the click that is ejective, not a subsequent consonant. (In Ladefoged's analysis in the table below, if there is only a single segment, this is indicated by a single non-subscript letter for the accompaniment.) This is one reason for analysing such clicks as airstream contours instead of clusters.

Of the languages illustrated below,
  • !Xσυ
    !Xσυ language

    Taa, also known as !X??, is a Khoisan language with a very large number of phonemes , with at least 58 consonants, 31 vowels, and four tones , or at least 87 consonants, 20 vowels, and two tones , by many counts the most of any known language....
     and N|u are Tuu languages
    Tuu languages

    The Tuu or Taa-!Kwi languages are a language family consisting of two language clusters spoken in Botswana and South Africa. The relationship between the two is not doubted, but is not close....
  • ?Hoan and Ju|'hυasi are ?Hoan-Juu languages
  • Korana
    Korana language

    Korana, or !Ora, is an moribund Khoisan language of South Africa. An ethnic Griqua population of 10,000 live in South Africa, and perhaps Botswana, with half a dozen elderly speakers as of 2008....
    , Nama
    Nama language

    The Khoekhoe language, or Khoekhoegowab, also known by the ethnic term N?m? and previously the now discouraged term Khoikhoi#Name, is the most populous and widespread of the Khoisan languages....
    , and G|ui are Khoe languages
    Khoe languages

    The Khoe languages are the largest of the non-Bantu languages language family indigenous to southern Africa. They are often considered to be a branch of a suspected Khoisan languages language family, and are known as Central Khoisan in that scenario....
(all spoken primarily in Namibia
Namibia

Namibia, officially the Republic of Namibia, is a country in southern Africa on the Atlantic Ocean coast. It shares borders with Angola and Zambia to the north, Botswana to the east, and South Africa to the south....
 and Botswana
Botswana

The Republic of Botswana , is a landlocked country in Southern Africa. Citizens of Botswana are called "Batswana" , regardless of ethnicity. Formerly a British protectorate of Bechuanaland Protectorate, Botswana adopted its new name after becoming independent within the Commonwealth of Nations on 30 September 1966....
)
  • Sandawe
    Sandawe language

    Sandawe or Sandawi is a tonal language spoken by about 40,000 Sandawe people in the Dodoma region of Tanzania. Language use is vigorous among both adults and children, with people in some areas monolingual....
     and Hadza
    Hadza language

    Hadza is a language isolate spoken by fewer than a thousand people along the shores of Lake Eyasi in Tanzania. Despite the small number of speakers, language use is vigorous, with most children learning it....
     are language isolate
    Language isolate

    A language isolate, in the absolute sense, is a natural language with no demonstrable genealogical relationship with other living languages; that is, one that has not been demonstrated to descend from an ancestor common to any other language....
    s spoken in Tanzania
    Tanzania

    Tanzania , officially the United Republic of Tanzania , is a country in East Africa that is bordered by Kenya and Uganda on the north, Rwanda, Burundi and the Democratic Republic of the Congo on the west, and Zambia, Malawi and Mozambique on the south....
  • Dahalo
    Dahalo language

    Dahalo is an endangered language South Cushitic languages language spoken by at most 400 people on the Kenyan coast near the mouth of the Tana River....
     is a Cushitic
    Cushitic languages

    The Cushitic languages are a branch of the Afro-Asiatic languages language family spoken in the Horn of Africa. They are named after the Biblical figure Cush by analogy with Shem being the eponym origin of Semitic languages....
     language of Kenya
    Kenya

    The Republic of Kenya is a country in East Africa. It is bordered by Ethiopia to the north, Somalia to the northeast, Tanzania to the south, Uganda to the west, and Sudan to the northwest, with the Indian Ocean running along the southeast border....
  • Xhosa
    Xhosa language

    Xhosa is one of the official languages of South Africa. Xhosa is spoken by approximately Xhosa, or about 18% of the South African population. Like most Bantu languages, Xhosa is a Tone , that is, the same sequence of consonants and vowels can have different meanings when said with a rising or falling or high or low intonation....
     and Yeyi
    Yeyi language

    Yeyi or ShiYeyi is a endangered language Bantu languages spoken by 45,000 people along the Okavango River in Namibia and Botswana. Yeyi, influenced by Ju languages languages, is one of several Bantu languages along the Okavango with clicks....
     are Bantu languages
    Bantu languages

    The Bantu languages constitute a grouping belonging to the Niger-Congo languages family. This grouping is deep down in the genealogical tree of the Bantoid grouping, which in turn is deep down in the Niger-Congo tree....
  • Damin
    Damin

    Damin was a ceremonial language register used by the advanced initiated men of the Lardil and the Yangkaal tribes in Aboriginal Australia....
     was an initiation jargon in northern Australia
    Australia

    Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a country in the southern hemisphere comprising the Australia of the world's smallest continent, the major island of Tasmania, and numerous list of islands of Australia in the Indian Ocean and Pacific Oceans....
    .


The four Dahalo manners occur only with a dental release. Damin has only nasal clicks, but in addition has a voiceless unaspirated "spurt" that might be considered an egressive click. Three Sandawe clicks (*) conflate to prenasalized voiced between vowels. In other languages nasalization may be variable, and best heard between vowels.

IPA Manner !Xσυ N|uu ?Hoan Ju|’hυasi Korana Nama G|ui Sandawe Hadza Dahalo Xhosa Yeyi Damin
Voiceless unaspirated velar plosive • • • • • • • • * • • •  
Aspirated velar plosive • • • • • • • • * • • •  
Voiceless unaspirated velar plosive and glottal stop • • • • •  
Voiceless glottalized velar plosive (prenasalized between vowels) • • •  
Voiceless velar nasal and glottal stop • •  
Voiced velar plosive • • • • • • * •  
Voiced affricated velar plosive •  
Breathy-voiced velar plosive •  
Voiced velar nasal • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Labialized voiced velar nasal •  
Breathy-voiced velar nasal •  
Voiceless velar nasal • •  
Labialized voiceless velar nasal •  
Voiceless delayed-aspirated velar nasal • • • • • •  
Voiceless ingressive pulmonic nasal with delayed aspiration •  
Preglottalized velar nasal • •  
Voiced velar nasal followed by voiceless aspirated velar nasal •  
Voiceless unaspirated uvular plosive • • • •  
Aspirated uvular plosive • • •  
Voiceless affricated velar plosive • •  
Voiceless affricated uvular plosive • • •  
Uvular ejective • • •  
Affricated velar ejective • • •  
Affricated uvular ejective • • •  
Voiceless velar ejective, followed by uvular ejective •  
Voiced velar plosive followed by aspiration • •  
Voiced velar plosive followed by voiceless velar fricative •  
Voiced velar plosive followed by voiceless affricated ejective •  
Voiced velar plosive, followed by uvular ejective •  
Voiced uvular plosive (usually prenasalized) • • •  
Voiced (or prenasalized) uvular plosive, followed by aspiration, velar fricative, or uvular trill •  


Click genesis and click loss

Clicks are often portrayed as a primitive or primordial feature of human language, but we have no reason to suspect that they are very old compared to other speech sounds. In fact, given their complexity, they may be relatively recent. How clicks arose is not currently known. Some linguists speculate that clicks were initially used for taboo avoidance
Avoidance speech

Avoidance speech, or "mother-in-law languages", is a feature of many Australian Aboriginal languages, some North American languages and Bantu languages of Africa whereby in the presence of certain relatives it is taboo to use everyday speech style, and instead a special speech style must be used....
 and then borrowed into regular speech. (Compare Damin
Damin

Damin was a ceremonial language register used by the advanced initiated men of the Lardil and the Yangkaal tribes in Aboriginal Australia....
.) Others suggest that they developed from other complex consonants. For example, the Sandawe
Sandawe language

Sandawe or Sandawi is a tonal language spoken by about 40,000 Sandawe people in the Dodoma region of Tanzania. Language use is vigorous among both adults and children, with people in some areas monolingual....
 word for 'horn', , with a lateral affricate, may be a cognate with the root found throughout the Khoe family
Khoe languages

The Khoe languages are the largest of the non-Bantu languages language family indigenous to southern Africa. They are often considered to be a branch of a suspected Khoisan languages language family, and are known as Central Khoisan in that scenario....
, which has a lateral click. This and other words suggests that at least some Khoe clicks may have formed from consonant clusters when the first vowel of a word was lost; in this instance ? ? (= ).

On the other side of the equation, several non-endangered languages in vigorous use demonstrate click loss. For example, the East Kalahari languages
Khoe languages

The Khoe languages are the largest of the non-Bantu languages language family indigenous to southern Africa. They are often considered to be a branch of a suspected Khoisan languages language family, and are known as Central Khoisan in that scenario....
 have lost a large percentage of their clicks, presumably due to Bantu
Bantu languages

The Bantu languages constitute a grouping belonging to the Niger-Congo languages family. This grouping is deep down in the genealogical tree of the Bantoid grouping, which in turn is deep down in the Niger-Congo tree....
 influence. As a rule, a click is replaced by a consonant with the manner of articulation
Manner of articulation

In linguistics , manner of articulation describes how the tongue, lips, jaw, and other speech organs are involved in making a sound make contact....
 of the accompaniment and the place of articulation
Place of articulation

In articulatory phonetics, the place of articulation of a consonant is the point of contact, where an obstruction occurs in the vocal tract between an active articulator and a passive articulator ....
 of the forward release: alveolar click releases (the family) tend to mutate into a velar stop or affricate, such as ; palatal clicks ( etc.) tend to mutate into a palatal stop such as , or a post-alveolar affricate ; and dental clicks ( etc.) tend to mutate into an alveolar affricate .

See also

  • List of phonetics topics
    List of phonetics topics

    A * Acoustic phonetics* Active articulator* Affricate* Airstream mechanism* Alfred C. Gimson* Allophone* Alveolar approximant* Alveolar consonant...


External links

  • .