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Narrow transcription, Dialects and Secondlanguage Phonetics

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Spanish speakers habitually add a vowel to the onset of such a word so that it ... More practice with Spanish on page 289 ex 8.8. Asian use of liquids ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Narrow transcription, Dialects and Secondlanguage Phonetics


1
Narrow transcription,Dialects and
Second-language Phonetics
  • HESP 403 November 6 2006

2
Dialects and L2 acquisition
  • Good times to use diacritics because...?

3
Dialects
  • Not all people who speak a language speak it the
    same way.
  • Not every speaker of a dialect will use all sound
    changes associated with that dialect
  • A language can be subdivided into any number of
    dialects which each vary in some way from the
    parent language.
  • They are not to be considered disordered or
    wrong
  • They are distinguished by functionality and
    normality
  • A speaker of a different dialect can still be
    understood by another, and that behavior is not
    abnormal for his class, region or social group.

4
Functions of dialects

5
Dialectical processes in phonology
  • Mergers
  • Two different sounds become the same
  • Shift
  • A sound moves into a different position
  • Chain shift
  • A sound moves into a different position, pushing
    that sound into another, and into another

6
Examples of dialect changes
  • Boston lack of r Harvard Square
    Hahvahd Squah
  • NYC substitution of t and d for initial ð /
    ?
  • look at these things
  • South ai (hide) is monophthong a
  • /I/ and /e/ before nasals (pin vs. pen)
  • Northern Cities
  • wh and w (whale vs. wail which vs. witch)

7
The Northern Cities shift
8
Northern Cities shift
  • / ? / ? / a / ball
  • / a / ? / æ / top
  • / æ / ? / i? / tack

9
The Southern Shift
10
Southern shift
  • / u / ? / i? / blue
  • / e / ? / I / pen
  • / a / ? / o / spot card

11
Cultural / Social dialects
  • AAVE
  • Omission/substitution of word-final consonant
  • that ? ðæ
  • bad ? bæt
  • Vowels still maintain phonetic properties of
    preceding the following consonant

12
Predicting speech of different dialects
  • ... Will be good to practice, so that you are
    prepared in the field
  • ... but it wont be graded as part of this course.
  • Be prepared to transcribe speech from any
    dialect, though.
  • Youll have to do this in practice!

13
Second-Language phoneticsinterference
  • English
  • Learning features of a second language
  • Spanish
  • Vowels
  • Consonants
  • Syllable structure
  • Asian
  • Liquids
  • Syllable structure

14
Non-native vowel changes Spanish
15
Spanish stop sounds
  • Like many non-English languages, Spanish
    voiceless sounds are unaspirated, yielding a
    voiced perception from English listeners.
  • Youll notice this in speakers of French, Hindi,
    Russian, Swedish, and Arabic as well.

16
Spanish syllable structure
  • Spanish does not allow /s/ consonant clusters in
    word-initial position
  • Ex step, school, slip, speak
  • Spanish speakers habitually add a vowel to the
    onset of such a word so that it obeys the
    syllable structure of their native language.
  • More practice with Spanish on page 289 ex 8.8

17
Asian use of liquids
  • The lateral and rhotic liquids are allophones in
    Japanese, and are thus not perceived as distinct
    sounds.
  • Common misperceptions include words like
  • Lake/rake rate/late raw/law correct/collect
  • Default production is r for both English
    /r/ and /l/.

18
Asian syllable structure
  • Japanese and Korean do not allow consonant
    clusters in any position.
  • When hearing CCs in nonsense speech, they will
    claim to hear a (phantom) vowel
  • Ebzo Ebuzo adzo adozo
  • Syllables are all open (except some rare cases
    where a syllable ends in n, so final consonants
    are often deleted or followed by an extra vowel

19
Cross-language vowel learning
  • Comparing English with other languages
  • Quality
  • Quantity
  • Developmental effects

20
Vowel systemstopics from the reading
  • Quantity vs. Quality in vowels
  • The tense/lax problem
  • Duration-based vowel features
  • Estonian Temporal Compensation
  • Finnish duration independence
  • Swedish duration opposition

21
Allophonic vowel duration
  • Swedish learned duration effects
  • Contrast with English
  • Arabic extrinsic duration independence
  • No vowel lengthening before voice in Arabic,
    but they can use this to perceive voicing in
    other languages.

22
Practice transcription
  • Listen carefully...

23
Homework
  • Page 305 study questions for chapter 8
    1, 3, 5, 6, 9, 10, 15
  • Answer briefly, but with thought.
  • QUIZ next week
  • Using narrow transcription, identifying
    suprasegmental features and non-native phonetic
    features (conceptually)
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