Ejectives are sounds you make when you push air out of your mouth and your nose at the same time.
Imagine you're blowing up a balloon, but instead of just blowing through your mouth, you also pinch your nose shut. That extra squeeze makes a special kind of sound called an ejective. It’s like a little pop or a puff that adds more power to what you’re saying.
How Ejectives Work
Normally, when you speak, air moves from your lungs up through your mouth. But with ejectives, it's like you're giving the air a double push. You close your mouth and pinch your nose, trapping the air, then you let it out quickly, making a loud, puffy sound.
Ejectives in Real Life
Some languages use ejectives all the time! For example, if you say “pch” like you're trying to puff up a balloon, that's an ejective. It’s not magic, just a cool way of speaking that uses your whole face to make fun sounds.
Examples
- A child learning to speak a new language uses ejective consonants like the 'ch' sound in Cherokee.
- Ejectives are like a hiss when you pop your cheeks while talking.
- When you say 'pt' in the word 'p'ta' (like in Haida), it's an ejective.
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See also
- What is dissimilation?
- What is phonotactic?
- How Does Phonetics and Phonology: Introduction Work?
- How is a language declared extinct?
- How Does A Linguistics Guide for Beginners! Work?