Voice onset time

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Voice onset time
+ Aspirated
0 Tenuis
Voiced

In phonetics, voice onset time, commonly abbreviated VOT, is the length of time that passes between when a consonant is released and when voicing, the vibration of the vocal folds begins.

The three major phonation types of stops can be analyzed in terms of their voice onset time.

Because neither aspiration nor voicing is absolute, with intermediate degrees of both, the relative terms fortis and lenis are often used to describe a binary opposition between a series of consonants with higher (more positive) VOT, defined as fortis, and a second series with lower (more negative) VOT, defined as lenis. Of course, being relative, what fortis and lenis mean in one language will not in general correspond to what they mean in another.

Voicing contrast applies to all types of consonants, but aspiration is generally only a feature of stops and affricates.

Table. Relative VOT distinctions in various languages.
Voice Onset Time Examples
(fortis) Strong aspiration Tlingit Navajo, Korean
Moderate aspiration English Cantonese Thai, Armenian
Mild aspiration Navajo, Korean
Tenuis Cantonese Tlingit Korean Spanish, S. Japanese Thai, Armenian
Partially voiced English
(lenis) Fully voiced Spanish, S. Japanese N. Japanese Thai, Armenian

References