Aspiration (phonetics)
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In phonetics, aspiration is the strong burst of air that accompanies the release of some stop consonants. To hear and feel the difference between the aspirated and the unaspirated sound, put your hand in front of your mouth and say key and then ski. The k in key is aspirated; in ski, it is unaspirated.
English voiceless stops are aspirated when they begin a stressed syllable (as in pen, ten, Ken), but this aspiration is not distinctive (They also have unaspirated variants in other positions). In many languages, such as Hindi/Urdu, Mandarin, Korean, Icelandic and Ancient Greek, /t/ and /tʰ/ are different phonemes altogether.
Alemannic German dialects have unaspirated fortis /p t k/ as well as aspirated fortis /pʰ tʰ kʰ/; the latter series is usually viewed as clusters. Icelandic has pre-aspirated /hp ht hk/; some scholars interpret these as clusters. /b d g/ are normally also voiceless in Danish and most Southern varieties of German. Traditionally, they are still transcribed as <b d g>, even though what distinguishes them from their "fortis" counterparts <p t k> is mainly their lack of aspiration.
da:Aspiration (sang) ja:有気音