Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Transcript

SCOTT SIMON, HOST:

Teenagers can seem sullen, moody and uncommunicative, unless you know how to listen to them. James Harbeck does. He's an editor and linguist in Canada who's analyzed sounds that can be distinctly annoying to adults. James Harbeck joins us from the studios of the CBC in Toronto. Thanks so much for being with us.

JAMES HARBECK: Hi. Nice to be here.

SIMON: First, what made you devote any scholarship to this?

HARBECK: I wouldn't say that this is a grand scholarly work exactly. It's more just an application of undergraduate-level phonetics to things that I hear on the bus on the way home.

SIMON: I want to ask you about a few sounds, and if you could begin by recreating them. The first is, and I'm going to sign onto your language here, the breathy-voiced long, low, back, unrounded vowel with advanced tongue root.

HARBECK: Ahh.

(LAUGHTER)

HARBECK: I can't even do it without rolling my eyes. They automatically go right up to the roof.

SIMON: I'm convinced. You're exasperated. All right. And that means?

HARBECK: Utter exasperation, which can range from a life-threatening imposition to a request to take out the garbage five minutes sooner.

(LAUGHTER)

SIMON: OK. Very convincing. OK. Another one. The glottal fricative and breathy-voiced mid-low central, unrounded vowel sound repeated.

HARBECK: Huh-ha-ha-ha-ha.

SIMON: Now this is a sound more commonly heard in young men than in young women?

HARBECK: If I heard a young woman make that sound, I think I would get off the bus at the next stop.

SIMON: Yeah, it's not exactly warm and congenial. And it means...?

HARBECK: It means dirty.

SIMON: Somebody said something that's a little unsavory?

HARBECK: Or somebody wishes to imply something that's a little unsavory.

SIMON: Ah. Now, are these signs, Mr. Harbeck, designed to communicate or not to communicate?

HARBECK: All communication is really behavior designed to cause behavior in another person, and sometimes that behavior is a pull or a push and sometimes it's a block.

SIMON: Do you have a favorite?

HARBECK: Well, there's one that I still use.

SIMON: Yes.

HARBECK: Which is: tsk-ahh...

(LAUGHTER)

HARBECK: ...which people might think is a very sort of girly kind of sound but I mean I have no defense for that.

SIMON: What's the linguistic translation of that?

HARBECK: You mean the phonetic description?

SIMON: Yes.

HARBECK: That was an alveolar click with unreleased velar coarticulation followed by a glottal stop, reduced central unrounded vowel, which in my case I just about left out, and a long glottal fricative. So the click, tsk. It's just that, you know, we spell it tsk, and then glottal stop, the vowel, the fricative is just: ahh.

(LAUGHTER)

SIMON: OK. I'm sorry. What did I say? What did I - oh, I'm sorry. Well, you got me to react, didn't you? It works. James Harbeck, writer and editor and interpreter of teenage sounds joining us from the CBC in Toronto.

HARBECK: Duh.

SIMON: Thanks so much.

HARBECK: Thanks.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

SIMON: This is NPR News. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

300x250 Ad

300x250 Ad

Support quality journalism, like the story above, with your gift right now.

Donate