1 / 18

English Variety + Allophony

English Variety + Allophony. January 15, 2014. For Friday. Please take a stab at the following exercises from Chapter 2 of A Course in Phonetics before Wednesday: A 1-10 B 11-20 D 31-40 (American speaker) ( phonemic transcriptions) Here’s the online link:

feryal
Download Presentation

English Variety + Allophony

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. English Variety + Allophony January 15, 2014

  2. For Friday • Please take a stab at the following exercises from Chapter 2 of A Course in Phonetics before Wednesday: • A 1-10 • B 11-20 • D 31-40 • (American speaker) • (phonemic transcriptions) • Here’s the online link: • http://www.phonetics.ucla.edu/course/chapter2/exercises.htm • This will be a practice transcription exercise that we will go over together in class.

  3. A Word of Caution • The vowel system of English can vary greatly from one dialect to another. • Ex: the vowels of Canadian English have shifted away from their American counterparts… • (for some, but not all, speakers) • Shift #1:  Unshifted: Unshifted: • Shift #2:  • There are also new shifts underway! • Shift #3:  “head” • Shift #4:  “hid” • Shift #5:  “hood”

  4. /u/-fronting • The final element of the shift involves the “fronting” of the vowel /u/. • Compare: • Los Angeles • Saskatoon • Note that not every Canadian does this. • Calgary • Also note that North American vowel systems are diverging: • Chicago • Saskatoon • New York City Source: http://accent.gmu.edu

  5. Moral of the Story #1 • Your phonemic system might be different from the “official” transcriptions in the book. • If you don’t believe what the book says, you may very well be right. • Pay attention to both your speech and the phonetic habits of those around you... • You might learn something!

  6. What’s Going On? • Vowel articulations can be characterized along four dimensions: • Height (of tongue body) • high, mid, low • Front-back (of tongue body) • front, central, back • Roundedness (of lips) • rounded vs. unrounded • “Tenseness” • tense/lax

  7. Corner Vowels

  8. X-Ray Videos

  9. The (American) Vowel Space

  10. The Canadian Shift, Diagrammed X

  11. Further Observations • In the Canadian vowel shift: • However, this rule only applies to native . • For borrowed words,  [a] or [æ] • For example: • pasta • Mazda • gracias • garage • Also note: William Shatner.

  12. Moral of the Story #2 • Phonology is important. • Sounds exhibit patterns in a language. • Remember: • Specific allophones of a phoneme often emerge in specific phonetic contexts. • Ex: the flap in English. • appears when /t/ or /d/ precede an unstressed syllable • metal metallic • The production of specific allophones is often specified by phonological rule.

  13. Patterns • There is an interesting rule regarding the production of in some English dialects. • Compare Canadian English with English English • CEEE “care” “park” “read” “other” “ride” “carrot” “cart” • Do you see any patterns?

  14. The Rules • In English English: • surfaces as when it precedes vowels • Examples: read, carrot • surfaces as when it appears at the end of a syllable or word • Examples: care, other • makes a preceding vowel long when it appears before a consonant in the same syllable • Examples: park, cart

  15. Rhotic vs. Non-Rhotic • Note: English is divided up between “rhotic” dialects and “non-rhotic” dialects • rhotic: appears everywhere • non-rhotic: disappears, sometimes • Rhotic dialects: • Canadian English, General American, Irish English, Scots English… • Non-Rhotic dialects: • English English, Australian English, some areas of the American East Coast…

  16. Overheard in New York • Old lady with heavy accent, pointing to a closed store: • What’s that? • Young lady: I’m not sure. • Old lady: Is that a pahwn shop? • Young lady (startled): No, that looks like a pawn shop… • Old lady: That’s what I said--a pahwn shop. • Young lady (relieved): Ohhh, I thought you said ‘porn shop’! • Old lady: No, I said, ‘pahwn’, not ‘pahwn.’ • Young lady: Oh, you say them exactly the same! Source: www.overheardinnewyork.com

  17. Overheard in New York Old lady: I do? Young lady: Yeah! Saw ‘aw.’ Old lady: Ahw. Young lady: Now say ‘or.’ Old lady: Ahw. Young lady: No, it’s orrr. With an R. Old lady: That’s what I said -- ‘ahw’. Source: www.overheardinnewyork.com

More Related