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Chapter 2 Phonetics and Phonology

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Title: Chapter 2 Phonetics and Phonology


1
Chapter 2 Phonetics and Phonology
2
Phonetics
  • ----A branch of linguistics which studies the
    characteristics of speech sounds and provides
    methods for their description, classification and
    transcription, e.g. p bilabial, stop.

3
Three branches of phonetics
  • Articulatory phonetics----from the speakers
    point of view, how speakers produce speech
    sounds
  • Auditory phonetics----from the hearers point of
    view, how sounds are perceived
  • Acoustic phonetics----from the physical way or
    means by which sounds are transmitted from one to
    another.

4
Speech organs three important areas
  • Pharyngeal cavity ---- the throat
  • The oral cavity ---- the mouth
  • Nasal cavity ---- the nose.

5
The diagram of speech organs
  1. Lips
  2. Teeth
  3. Teeth ridge(??) (alveolar)
  4. Hard palate(??)
  5. Soft palate (velum)
  6. Uvula(??)
  7. Tip of tongue
  8. Blade of tongue(??)
  9. Back of tongue(??)
  10. Vocal cords(??)
  11. Pharyngeal cavity(??)
  12. Nasal cavity (??)

6
Orthographic representation of speech sounds
  • ---- A standardized and internationally accepted
    system of phonetic transcription is the
    International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA). The basic
    principle of the IPA is using one letter to
    represent one speech sound.
  • Broad transcription ---- used in dictionary and
    textbook for general purpose, without diacritics,
    e.g. clear l , pit
  • Narrow transcription ---- used by phonetician
    for careful study, with diacritics, e.g. dark l
    , aspirated p

7
Some major articulatory variables
  • ---- dimensions on which speech sounds may
    vary
  • Voicing---- voiced voiceless
  • Nasality ---- nasal non-nasal
  • Aspiration ----- aspirated unaspirated

8
Classification of English speech sounds
  • ---- English speech sounds are generally
    classified into two large categories
  • Vowels
  • Consonants
  • Note The essential difference between these
    two classes is that in the production of the
    former the airstream meets with no obstruction of
    any kind in the throat, the nose or the mouth,
    while in that of the latter it is somehow
    obstructed.

9
The Table of Phonetic Transcription in English
10
Classification of consonants
  • ---- English consonants may be classified
    according to two dimensions
  • The manner of articulation
  • The place of articulation

11
The manner of articulation
  • stops/plosives p, b, t, d, k, g
  • fricatives f, v, s, z, W, T, F,
    V, h
  • affricates tF, dV
  • liquids l(lateral), r
  • nasals m, n, N
  • glides/semivowels w, j.

12
The place of articulation
  • bilabial p, b, m, w
  • labiodental f , v
  • dental W, T
  • alveolar t, d, s, z, n, l, r
  • palatal F, V, tF, dV, j
  • velar k, g, N
  • glottal h.

13
The place of articulation
  1. Bilabial
  2. Labiodental
  3. Dental or interdental
  4. Alveolar
  5. Palatoalveolar
  6. Palatal
  7. Velar
  8. Uvular
  9. Glottal.

14
The description of English consonantsEnglish
consonants
15
Cardinal vowel
  • a set of vowel qualities arbitrarily defined,
    fixed and unchanging, intended to provide a frame
    of reference for the description of the actual
    vowels of existing languages.

16
Classification of vowels
  • ---- English vowels can be divided into two
    large categories
  • Monophthongs or pure/single vowels
  • Diphthongs or gliding vowels

17
English consonants
  • The consonants of English can be described in the
    following manner
  • p  voiceless bilabial stop
  • b  voiced bilabial stop
  • s   voiceless alveolar fricative
  • z   voiced alveolar fricative

18
Monophthongs or pure/single vowels
  • ----According to which part of the tongue is held
    highest in the process of production, the vowels
    can be distinguished as
  • front vowels I, I, e, Z, A, B
  • central vowels E, E, Q
  • back vowels u, u, C, C, B.

19
According to the openness of the mouth
  • Close I, I, u, u.
  • Semi-close e, E
  • Semi-open E, C
  • Open A, B, C, B, Q

20
The diagram of single vowel classification by
applying the two criteria so far mentioned
21
According to the shape of the lips orthe degree
of lip rounding
  • rounded u, u, C, C
  • unrounded I, I, e, Z, A, B, E,
    E, Q, B.

22
According to the length of the vowels
  • long I, E, u, C, B
  • short I, e, Z, A, E, Q, B, u,
    C.

23
Monophthong???????vs. vowel glides.????
  • Languages also frequently make use of a
    distinction between vowels where the quality
    remains constant throughout the articulation and
    those where there is an audible change of
    quality.
  • The former are known as pure or monophthong
    vowels and the latter, vowel glides.

24
diphthongs???
  • If a single movement of the tongue is involved,
    the glides are called diphthongs.
  • Diphthongal glides in English can be heard in
    such words as way we?, tide ta?d, how ha?,
    toy t??, and toe t??.

25
Triphthong ????
  • A double movement produces a triphthong, which is
    a glide from one vowel to another and then to a
    third, all produced rapidly and without
    interruption.
  • They are really diphthongs followed by the schwa
    ?, found in English words like wire wa?? and
    tower ta??.

26
vowels
  • vowels
  • Monophthongs semi-vowel vowel glides
  • Diphthongs
    triphthongs

27
Features of Vowels
  • Functionally, vowels are the basis of
    syllables.
  • Physically, vowels are musical.
  • Articulatorily, for vowels, airstream is not
    obstructed, and speech organs are tense.

28
Phonology
  • Speech is a continuous process, so the vocal
    organs do not move from one sound segment to the
    next in a series of separate steps. Rather,
    sounds continually show the influence of their
    neighbors.
  • Speech is one of human activities used for convey
    meaning

29
2.3 Phonology
  • Phone phonetic unit
  • 1.not distinctive of meaning 2.physical as heard
    or produced 3.marked with
  • phoneme
  • 1.phonological unit 2.distinctive of meaning
  • 3.abstract, not physical
  • 4.marked with / /

30
2.3 Phonology
  • Minimal pair a pair of words identical in every
    way except for one sound segment in the same
    position.
  • Minimal set a group of words differentiated by
    one sound segment in the same position.

Chunk Ban Bet Fan Fine Sink Site Seed
Junk bin bat van vine zinc Side soup
vowel Feat fit fate fat fought foot
consonant Big pig rig fig dig wig
31
2.3 Phonology
  • Free variation When the substitution of two or
    more sounds in the same position does not result
    in any change of meaning, theyre said to be in
    free variation. economics
  • You say ither and I say aither,
  • You say nither and I say naither,
  • ither aither nither naither
  • Lets call the whole thing off.
  • Distinctive features features that distinguish
    one phoneme with another. Seal/zeal

b d g
Stop
Voiced
Bilabial - -
Alveolar - -
velar - -
32
Complementary distribution
  • the relationship between two different elements,
    where one element is found in a particular
    environment and the other element is found in the
    opposite environment. It often indicates that two
    superficially different elements are in fact the
    same linguistic unit at a deeper level. In some
    instances, more than two elements can be in
    complementary distribution with one another.

33
Contrastive distribution
  • both elements are found in the same environment
    with a change in meaning. An example of this in
    English would be /d/ and /p/, as can be seen in
    the words dot and pot.

34
Complementary distribution
  • Complementary distribution is commonly applied to
    phonology, where similar phones in complementary
    distribution are usually allophones of the same
    phoneme. For instance, in English, p and p?
    are allophones of the phoneme /p/ because they
    occur in complementary distribution. p? always
    occurs when it is the syllable onset and followed
    by a stressed vowel (as in the word pin). p
    occurs in all other situations (as in the word
    spin).

35
complementary distribution
  • There are cases where elements are in
    complementary distribution, but are not
    considered allophones. For example in English h
    and ? (engma, in English) are in complementary
    distribution, since h only occurs at the
    beginning of a syllable and ? only at the end.
    But because they have so little in common in
    phonetic terms they are still considered separate
    phonemes.

36
2.3 Phonology
  • Supresegmental features distinctive features
    above the level of individual segments over a
    sequence of two or more phonemic segments such as
    syllable, word, phrase and sentence which may
    also distinguish meaning.
  • Syllable longer than one sound and smaller than
    a word.
  • Phonetically a unit consisting of a center which
    has little or no airflow and sounds comparatively
    loud.(sonority scale klasp14521)
  • Structurally
  • syllable
  • onset
    rhyme
  • nucleus
    coda
  • Phonologically it concerns the way vowels and
    consonants combine to form various sequences.
    (sequential ruleCCCVCCCC)sixths
  • Terms Close/open syllable Initial cluster
    splash medial cluster pastry final cluster
    test
  • Three-consonant cluster
  • i. s ii. p t k iii. l r w j
  • e.g. spring, scream, string, squeal, square,
    splendid, stew

37
Complementary distribution
  • Complementary distribution is commonly applied to
    phonology, where similar phones in complementary
    distribution are usually allophones of the same
    phoneme. For instance, in English, p and p?
    are allophones of the phoneme /p/ because they
    occur in complementary distribution. p? always
    occurs when it is the syllable onset and followed
    by a stressed vowel (as in the word pin). p
    occurs in all other situations (as in the word
    spin).

38
allophone
  • In phonetics, an allophone is one of a set of
    multiple possible spoken sounds (or phones) used
    to pronounce a single phoneme For example, p?
    (as in pin) and p (as in spin) are allophones
    for the phoneme /p/ in the English language.
    Although a phoneme's allophones are all
    alternative pronunciations for a phoneme, the
    specific allophones selected in a given situation
    is often predictable.

39
allophone
  • Changing the allophone used by native speakers
    for a given phoneme in a specific context usually
    will not change the meaning of a word but the
    result may sound non-native or unintelligible.
    Speakers of a given language usually perceive one
    phoneme in their language as a single distinctive
    sound in that language and are "both unaware of
    and even shocked by" the allophone variations
    used to pronounce single phonemes.

40
2.3 Phonology
  • Stress intensity or prominence given to one
    syllable rather than another.
  • Word stress import/import
  • Phrase stress black bird green house
  • Sentence stress I love you.
  • Logical stress I love YOU.
  • Tone pitch variation (???? car)
  • Intonation variation in stress, pitch or
    loudness (falling rising fall-rise rise-fall)
  • Thats not the book he wants.

41
complementary distribution
  • There are cases where elements are in
    complementary distribution, but are not
    considered allophones. For example in English h
    and ? (engma, written with the digraph lt-nggt in
    English) are in complementary distribution, since
    h only occurs at the beginning of a syllable
    and ? only at the end. But because they have so
    little in common in phonetic terms they are still
    considered separate phonemes

42
2.3 Phonology
  • Summary
  • Phonology
  • Difference between phonetics and phonology
  • Phoneme
  • Minimal pair/set
  • Free variation
  • Distinctive features
  • Suprasegmental features syllable, stress, tone,
    intonation, tone group
  • Homework exercise 5,6 and 7.

43
  • THANK YOU
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