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The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 2: The Sounds of Current English

The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 2: The Sounds of Current English. John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University. Introduction. 26 letters in the English alphabet More than 26 sounds (phonemes) in the English language

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The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 2: The Sounds of Current English

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  1. The Origins and Development of the English Language Chapter 2: The Sounds of Current English John Algeo and Thomas Pyles Michael Cheng National Chengchi University

  2. Introduction • 26 letters in the English alphabet • More than 26 sounds (phonemes) in the English language • a cat, came, calm, any, call, was • [e]  baker, day, bait, gauge, mesa, they, neighbor, great • Phonetic alphabet solves this problem

  3. The Organs of Speech • 1-nasal cavity2-lips3-teeth4-aveolar ridge5-hard palate6-velum (soft palate)7-uvula8-apex (tip) of tongue9-blade (front) of tongue10-dorsum (back) of tongue11-oral cavity12-pharynx13-epiglottis14-larynx15-vocal cords16-trachea17-esophagus

  4. Consonants of Current English • Classified according to • place of articulation (where they are made) • manner of articulation (how they are made) • Voicing • (see interactive flash)

  5. Consonants of Current English • Historical Stuff: • Similarity between [r] and [l] • Sally/Sarah, Kathleen/Katherine, stella (Latin)/steorra (Old English)

  6. Consonants of Current English: Dropping [r] • New England, New York City, coastal South, British RP (received pronunciation) • Dropped when followed by consonant • Kept when followed by a vowel, or the next word begins with a vowel • farm, far distance, the distance is far • faring, there is, far away, very, Carolina • ‘arf, cokernut, Eeyore, Marmee

  7. ‘arf, cokernut, Eeyore, Marmee • http://www.superstickershop.com/catalog/images/EeyoreSitting.jpg • https://www.msu.edu/user/steinbr1/pooh/images/disney/eeyore14.gif

  8. Consonants of Current English: Dropping [r] • Intrusive r • New England, New York City, RP • Have no fear, the fear of it • Have no idea, the idear of it

  9. Vowels of Current English

  10. Vowels

  11. Vowel Tongue PositionFront Back

  12. Dipthongs

  13. Variant vowel sounds[a], [æ:], [ɨ], [ө], [ɒ] • [a] ask, half, laugh, path (eastern New Eng) • [æ:] cap[kæp]-cab[kæ:b], bat-bad, lack-lag, can (be able) – can (to tin) • [ɨ] in just, children, would ???? • [ө] short o sound ???? • [ɒ] pot, top, rod, con (slightly rounded in Brit Eng)

  14. Variant vowel sounds[ɔ], [ɑ], [ɪ], [ɛ] • [ɔ] and [ɑ] caught-cot, taught-tot, dawn-don, gaud-god, pawed-pod (Pittsburg) • Lack of a contrast in a specific environment • [ɪ] and [ɛ] pin-pen, tin-ten, Jim-gem (before nasal in American south)

  15. Tense vowels are longer than lax vowels • Vowel length is hardly ever a distinguishing factor • can-can, halve-have, balm-bomb, vary-very

  16. Vowels before [r] • Sound of the vowel changes before [r] • cut-curt • bust-burst • moan-mourn • father-farther • Schwa glide can intrude • near [niər] [n ɪ r] • The time drew néar. The time dréw near.

  17. Vowels before [r] • Tenseness is not distinct before [r] • nearer-mirror [i] (tense) or [ɪ] (lax) • Fairy-ferry [e] (tense) or [ɛ] (lax) • Touring-during [u] (tense) or [ʊ] (lax) • Lax vowel more common

  18. Historical vowel merging before [r] • hoarse [o] – horse [ɔ] • Mourning – morning • borne – born • four – for • oar – or • foreword – forward

  19. Present day merging before [r] • Mississippi Valley and the West • [ɑ], [ɔ], [ɒ] • form – farm • or – are • born – barn • lord – lard

  20. Stress • [i] [ɪ] [ə] are often used in unstressed syllables • [i] and [ɪ] vary in final position and before another vowel • lucky, happy, city, seedy • various, curiosity, oriel, carrion

  21. Stress • [ɪ] and [ə] vary before a consonant • [ɪ] bucket, college, elude, illumine • [ə] many Americans starting to prefer [ə] in these words • Emerging rule: used [ɪ] before velar consonants and [ə] elsewhere • ignore, comic, hoping • stomach, mysterious

  22. Kinds of Sound Change: Assimilation • Assimilation – Sounds become more alike • Pancake • Spaceship • What is your name? • What’s yer name? • Whacher name? (palatalization)

  23. Kinds of Sound Change: Dissimilation • Dissimilation – Sounds become less alike • Diphthong [f] replaced by [p] • Chimney [n] replaced by [l] • Complete loss of sound because of proximity to another sounds • caterpillar, Canterbury, reservoir, terrestrial, southerner, barbiturate, governor, surprised

  24. Kinds of Sound Change: Elision • Elision – Sounds are omitted • What is your name? (unstressed vowel in is elided) • Aphesis– loss of unstressed initial vowel • about  ‘bout • Apheresis – loss of sound from beginning of word • almost  ‘most

  25. Kinds of Sound Change: Elision • Apocope – loss of sound from end of word • child  chile • Syncope – loss of sound from middle of word • family  fam’ly

  26. Kinds of Sound Change: Intrusion • Intrusion – Sounds are added • svarabhakti, epenthesis, anaptyxis • Intrusive [ə] often appears between consonants • elm, film • Henry, Dwight, Smyrna • arthritis, athlete

  27. Kinds of Sound Change: Intrusion • Consonants can be intrusive • warmth  warmpth (p inserted) • sense  [sɛnts] (t inserted) • length  lenkth (k inserted) • Nasal + voiceless fricative • Nasal + stop (vcls) + voiceless fricative

  28. Kinds of Sound Change: Metathesis • Metathesis: Sounds are reordered • Tax and task originally developed from the same word • [r] frequently metathesizes with an unstressed vowel • produce, perform • A sound and syllable boundary can metathesize • another  a whole nother thing

  29. Causes of Sound Change • Contact with another language • substratum or superstratum theory • Distributing sounds evenly through phonological space • Ease of articulation (assimilation, etc.) • makes it easier to talk faster • Spelling pronunciations • Hypercorrection

  30. Causes of Sound Change • Spelling pronunciations • controller  comptroller • Hypercorrection • talkin’, somethin’  chicking, Virging Islands • Overgeneralization • [ž] azure • rajah, cashmere, kosher

  31. The Phoneme • Regarded as the same sound by speakers of a language • Phonemes are made up of allophones – similar sounds that are not distinct • Complementary distribution – allophones only appear in specific environment • after [s] unaspirated [t] occurs but not aspirated [t] • Free variation [t] or [t*] can appear at the end of fight • stone, tone, fight, item, little, matter, bottle, out come

  32. Differing Transcriptions

  33. Exercises

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