1 / 21

Objective

Objective. Explain how sound is generated Define resonance identify major resonators. To produce speech: lungs, mouth, throat coordinate to. Generate sound Resonate sound Articulate sound Primary generators of sound are Vocal cords (muscles that make up the larynx)

terah
Download Presentation

Objective

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. Objective Explain how sound is generated Define resonance identify major resonators

  2. To produce speech: lungs, mouth, throat coordinate to • Generate sound • Resonate sound • Articulate sound • Primary generators of sound are • Vocal cords (muscles that make up the larynx) Breath in: larynx to trachea to lungs Breath out: reverse it!

  3. DO NOW GROUPS OF 3….WRITE DOWN AS MANY “SCRANTONESE” WORDS/PHRASES AS YOU CAN THINK OF…. WINNING GROUP GETS GREEN DOT!!

  4. Diagram

  5. What part do you think prevents you from choking? • Vocal cords by closing off the trachea

  6. Understanding the Resonators • Resonance: reinforcement produced by vibration • The resonators of sound for speech are: • The bones in the chest, neck, and head • The cavities of the throat, nose, and mouth

  7. Bones pick up vibrations of sound • Relax throat, jaw, lips, tongue • With lips barely touching humm-m-m-m-m-m-m • Where do the bones vibrate?

  8. Resonance occurs in Cavity • Touch bridge of nose hum ng-ng-ng-ng-ng-ng-ng • Where do you feel the resonance? • Depending on the person’s size & shape of their cavity, a different sound is produced….. • Larger the cavity/lower the sound • Smaller cavity/higher sound…

  9. Throat, Nose, Mouth • Resonance begins in throat..throat tense..pitch high throat relaxed…pitch low • Nose has a direct effect on three nasal sounds: • The “m” as in make • The “n” as in now • The “ng” as in sing • GREEN DOT: Why does the sound come out of your nose when you say each of the words above? • Your tongue is blocking the passage of air

  10. What makes a voice annoying? • Roz form Monster Inc.

  11. Throat, Nose, Mouth • Talk like a Texan…… Nose resonates all vowel sounds therefore twangy quality…. • These pears are delicious • Please keep your dog outside today • Carrots taste better cooked with butter • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YOIPqLocQ9E&NR=1 • MOUTH • Change size and shape by moving tongue, lips, jaw • Ah, ay, ee, oh, oo

  12. Review • Generating sound is primarily a function of the vocal cords… muscles in the larynx that vibrate • Resonating sound is effected by the bones in the Chest neck and head • Cavities of the throat, nose and mouth …these groups of resonators amplify sound Articulation: shape the sound into symbols that someone can recognize so it sounds like speech!!!

  13. Scrantonese • Kuzzints: Your uncle’s children. • Clozeda light: Will you please turn the lamp off? • Onnakowna: Because (“I got a flat tire onnakowna someone dropped nails on da road.”) • Pellow: Where you put your head when you sleep onnakowna you’re tired. • Buh-uns: Those little white round things on the front of your shirt. • Kupple-too-tree: The number of missing buh-uns you might have. • Hayna: Excuse me, but did I just sound as silly as I think I did? (It really means “ain’t it?”) • Jeet jet?: Gee, I was wondering if you had anything for dinner? • No, jew?: Well, no, golly, but I was wondering the same thing about you. • Jaunt-too?: Do you want to?

  14. Some more Scrantonese • Wock: What you take the dog for at night. • Tock: What you do on the phone. • Plimmit: A muted reference to Plymouth, Pennsylvania. • Dee Eynon: Sugerman’s Department Store. (R.I.P.) • Turdy-ate: Used to be WOLF-TV, Channel 38. Now it's WSWB 38. • Up Da Line: Up Scrah-un way. • Nanny Coke: Across the river from West Nanny Coke. • Lannick City: That place on the Jersey Shore where all of the bingo buses are going these days. • Swoyerville: Swoyersville. Don't ask why. No one knows. • Hose house: The place where dey keep da fire trucks. Sometimes called a fire barn, and usually found between a corpse house and a beer garden.

  15. Scrantonese I’m not done, yet • Melk: A drink that goes good with cookies. • Da You: The U. (The University of Scranton) • Otto: A car. • Over town: Downtown. • Downtown: Over town. • Tarupe: Throop, Pennsylvania. • Ackamee: The place where you get da grocery order. (ACME R.I.P.) • HaitchBeeyo: HBO, the cable TV all night movie station, I tink. • Baah-ul: That ting dey put Gibbons and Steg in. (A Baa-ul is a barrel, steg is beer) • I totso: I thought so, too. • Corpse house: Where else in the world do they call funeral parlors corpse houses? • Beer garden: The place where you go to pick up a six-pack of Steg. • Wah?: What?!

  16. Still more Scrantonese • Tot: What Mr. McArdle tried to do in school :) • Lonn more: It cuts the grass. • Rude aidy: The road that takes you to Penn State. • Atha Leets: Lots of good ones play for Penn State. • Bot tings: What you did with your money at deeEynon. • Da moll: The Viewmont Mall up on the highway. They’re always having big sales. • DaSteamtown: The other mall over town. • Wadder: Comes out the fosset. • Be-endat: Means “because.” • Hoddog: Tastes great with soss on it. • Fil’em: In some cultures, this is what you say when you bring your empty beer glasses to the bar. Here “fil’em” is the thing you put in your camera. • Arthur Idas: What retired athaleets take Excedrin for. • Burgarly: When you enter a building without permission and maybe take something. • Burgalry: A garbled form of burgarly. • Yuge: Really big. • Zenit: That brand of TV that you watch the Penn State athaleets on.

  17. Are you kidding me? • Hox: The basketball team in Lanna, Georgia • LCC: LCCC • Axe: Ask • Termistat: thermistat • Bub: light bulb • Winda: as in "closedawinda, daya live in a barn?" • Haf a cuppacaffee: half a cup of coffee • Up da mall, and down da mall: Viewmont and Steamtown respectively • Karpendale: Carbondale, PA • SowsideScrah-uhn: Southside Scranton, PA • Nangano: Nagano, Japan, where dey had dem `lympics • Axed: the past tense version of Axe (see above) • Paupack: Lake Wallanpaupack • Quanity: Quantity • Bigmintin: Binghamton • Tumb: (noun) Your thumb; (verb) to hitchhike, example = I tumbed in onnakowna my hog got stolen. • Daboad of em: The both of them.

  18. This is sick… • Ba-troom: a place to relieve yourself • Ba-tree: battery • A couple too tree: How many times have you been on the Coal Mine Tour? • Budaydos: potatos • Chalk-lots: chocolates, what ja buy at Gerty Hocks when yur up da mall, wockin and tockin. • Tinkin: when you put your brain in gear. • Sangwitch: What cha eat when you go up deeEynon. • dahntahnDOpahnt: Downtown Dupont, PA • AllaYouz: How you address several people at once • twahnyyearceahgo: 20 Years Ago • radarater: the thing heat comes out of • offah: He knocked da glass offah the table.

  19. I’m movin’ • roof in the leak: a common saying when water comes down from the roof • nooyourkas: people who vacation in the area (from anywhere outside the area) for the summer, generally found in the Moscow-Gouldsboro area of Lackawanna County • up damount'n: Montage Mountain Ski Resort, where concerts are held • darena: First Union Arena, Wilkes Barre PA (also called the "FU Arena") • John: People named John typically don't have last names. They're only referred to by profession as John DaBanker, John DaCarpenter, John DaRoofer (or DaLeaker), or John DaPlumber. A guy named Frank who ordered a cup of coffee in the diner everyday became known as John Caffee. - Dan • warsh: Did you remember to warsh behind your ears? -or- I warshed my shirt. • punkin: Goes well with thanksgiving dinner • doverman: The dog • erwha: or what? • pank: as in if you sit in the snow when you get up it's all panked down, this may strictly be a green ridge thing, but we insist it's a word! • chimley: chimney • pitzafrita: fried dough • crick: a place where wadder run truit and ya can go fishen • pie-ano: the music instrument with 88 keys • tray of pizza: tray of pizza

  20. Let’s list your most Scrantonese

  21. Articulation Problems • Four most common problems: • Sound substitutions • Omissions • Additions • transpositions

More Related