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Phonetics: The Sounds of Language

Phonetics: The Sounds of Language.

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Phonetics: The Sounds of Language

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  1. Phonetics: The Sounds of Language Phonetics is concerned with describing the speech sounds that occur in the languages of the world. We want to know what these sounds are, how they fall into patterns, and how they change in different circumstances… The first job of the phoneticians is … to try to find out what people are doing when they are talking and when they are listening to speech Peter Ladefoged, A Course in Phonetics, 1982, 2nd Edition

  2. Phonetics • How sounds are strung together • Sounds of all languages of the world together constitute a limited set of sounds that the human vocal tract can produce. • We will study speech sounds, how they are produced, and how they may be characterized.

  3. Sound Segments • Phonetics– the study of speech sounds • Know what an individual sound is, how each sound differs from all others. E.g. KEY POUT • E.g. How many sounds are there in the word cat? /c/,/a/,/t/. Yet it is heard as one continuous sound. • Spelling and sounds are not synonymous E.g. Not and Knot, how many sounds in both words? How about the word psycho?

  4. Sound Segments (cont.) • Although the sounds we produce and hear are continuous, speech is divisible into units. • I scream, you scream, we all scream for ice cream. • Grade A gray day; It’s hard to recognize speech It’s hard to wreck a nice beach; the sun’s rays meet The sons raise meet. • Not segmenting our words into individual sounds gives the illusion that foreign language speakers run their words together.

  5. Identity of Speech Sounds • Our knowledge of a language determines when we judge physically different sounds to be the same; we know which aspects or properties of the signal are linguistically important and which are not. E.g. How (cough) are you? Listener will ignore the cough. • Not linguistically significant– speaking slowly, quickly, “nasal twang”, personal styles of speaking, pitch or tempo differences.

  6. Identity of Speech Sounds (cont,) • Making sounds that are not speech sounds in our language. E.g. English speakers can make clicking sounds tsk,tsk,tsk, although it is not part of the English sound system. • Yet click are speech sounds in Xhosa, Zulu, Sosotho, and Khoikhoi—languages spoken in South Africa. • /th/ is a speech sound in English but not in French.

  7. Identity of Speech Sounds (cont.) • The way we use our linguistic knowledge to produce a meaningful utterance is complicated. • It is a chain of events that starts with an idea or message in the speaker’s brain or mind and ends with a similar message in the hearer’s brain. • The language faculty forms the message in words and transmits it by nerve signals to the organs of speech, which produce the physical sounds. • The study of the physical properties of the sounds themselves is acoustic phonetics. Auditory phonetics—the way listeners perceive the sound. Articulatory phonetics—how the vocal tract produces sounds of language.

  8. Spelling and Speech • Autumn: A time For Reflection. Autumn… I wonder why the “N” is silent. • The sounds of words are not represented systematically in orthography. • Did he believe that Caesar could see the people seize the seas? • e, ei,ae,ee,eo,ei,ea. Do they represent the same sounds?

  9. Spelling and Speech • The silly amoeba stole the key to the machine. • y,oe,ey, and i (same sounds as the previous sentence) • My father wanted many a village dame badly. • The letter a represents the several sounds. • Thus, each distinct sound must have a distinct symbol to represent it; and each symbol must represent one and only one distinct sound. Thus the birth of phonetic alphabet.

  10. The Phonetic Alphabet • Spelling of fish (ghoti). Gh (enough); O as in women and the ti like the sound in nation. (George Bernard Shaw) • Several letters may represent a single sound: ---To, too, two, through, threw, clue, shoe • A single letter may represent different sounds: --dame, dad, father, call, village, many

  11. The Phonetic Alphabet • A combination of letters may represent a single sound: -- shoot character Thomas physics Some letters have no sound at all in certain words: --mnemonic, autumn, resign, ghost

  12. Articulatory Phonetics • Vocal track consists of: a. glottis—the opening between the vocal cords and is located in the b. larynx—also called voice box c. pharynx—the tubular part of the throat above the larynx d. mouth—also called the oral cavity e. nasal cavity—nose and the plumbing that connects to the throat.

  13. Articulatory Phonetics • Analogy of vocal tract as the drum (vessel of air), changes shape different sounds are produced. • There are four air stream mechanism;pulmonicegressive (most common),ejective, ingressive and implosives. • Pulmonic—air that comes from the lungs • Egressive—pushed out air • Ejective-- Rare air stream mechanism, e.g. “p” sound makes a distinctive pop. • Ingressive—sound made by sucking air into the mouth to make clicks (tsk,tsk) • Implosives—air drawn from the mouth into the throat. (American Indians, Africa, India and Pakistan)

  14. Consonants • The sounds of all languages fall into 2 classes: consonants and vowels • In phonetics, consonants and vowels are sounds not the letters that refer to them. • Places of articulation Different consonant sounds result according to the place of articulation, where in the vocal tract the airflow restriction occurs. Movement of the tongue and lips—articulators—cause the restriction, reshaping of the oral cavity in various ways that result in consonant production

  15. Places of Articulation • Bilabials [p] [b] [m]—both lips are together. • Labiodentals [f][v]-touching the bottom lip to the upper teeth. • Interdentals [ ] [ ] –th –inserts the tip of the tongue between the upper and the lower teeth. • Alveolars [t] [d] [n][s] [z][l] [r]—raising the front part of the tongue to the alveolar ridge do, two, new, sue, zoo lateral [l]-tip of tongue rises to the alveolar ridge, leaving the rest of the tongue down, permitting the air to escape laterally over its sides. “la”, “ta la la”

  16. Place of articulation (cont.) • [r]-curling the tip of the tongue back behind the alveolar ridge; retroflex sound. May also be an alveolar trill—produced by the tongue vibrating against the roof of the mouth.

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