Yes, as Dan reported, terminal alkynes tend to show much more like quaternary carbons than tertiary carbons in the carbon spectra. This has to do with anomalous spin-spin relaxations. This is why quaternary carbons appear so much smaller than carbons with hydrogens on them in a typical carbon spectra, unless you put enough delay to allow the simple to totally relax between pulses. Alkyne carbons, even terminal alkynes, will also appear very small unless fully relaxed.
This is also one of the things that makes it very difficult to use integration in carbon spectra - the differences in relaxation time, especially for quaternary and alkyne carbons, lead to rather large variabilities in their responses.