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Introduction to Phonetics & Phonology

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1 Introduction to Phonetics & Phonology
Dr R. Oenbring Lin 220

2 What is phonetics? Phonetics is the study of speech sounds.

3 What is phonetics? Phonetics is the study of speech sounds.
a) how they’re produced (articulatory phonetics)

4 What is phonetics? Phonetics is the study of speech sounds.
a) how they’re produced (articulatory phonetics) b) their physical characteristics (acoustic phonetics)

5 Sound/symbol correspondence

6 Sound/symbol correspondence The need for a transcription system

7 Sound/symbol correspondence The need for a transcription system
Consider written English

8 Sound/symbol correspondence The need for a transcription system
Consider written English enough

9 Sound/symbol correspondence The need for a transcription system
Consider written English enough through

10 Sound/symbol correspondence The need for a transcription system
Consider written English enough through thorough

11 Sound/symbol correspondence The need for a transcription system
Consider written English enough through thorough thought

12 Sound/symbol correspondence The need for a transcription system
Consider written English enough through thorough thought bough

13 Sound/symbol correspondence The need for a transcription system
Consider written English enough through thorough thought bough think

14 Sound/symbol correspondence The need for a transcription system
Consider written English enough through thorough thought bough think those

15 Sound/symbol correspondence The need for a transcription system
Consider written English enough through thorough thought bough think those thistle

16 Sound/symbol correspondence The need for a transcription system
Consider written English enough through thorough thought bough think those thistle thong

17 Sound/symbol correspondence The need for a transcription system
Consider written English enough through thorough thought bough think those thistle thong church

18 Sound/symbol correspondence The need for a transcription system
Consider written English enough through thorough thought bough think those thistle thong church chemistry

19 Sound/symbol correspondence The need for a transcription system
Consider written English enough through thorough thought bough think those thistle thong church chemistry loch

20 Sound/symbol correspondence The need for a transcription system
Consider written English enough through thorough thought bough think those thistle thong church chemistry loch Cheryl

21 International Phonetic Alphabet IPA
Devised in the 19th Century to help describe the sounds of languages independently of a language’s orthography (= writing system). Under continuous revision. Last major revision was in 1993.

22 Sound/symbol correspondence
enough through thorough thought bough [ʌf] [u:] [ə] [ɔ:] [aʊ] think those thistle thong [θ] [ð] [θ] [θ] church chemistry loch Cheryl [tʃ] [k] [x] [ʃ]

23 Key Terms Phoneme - a unit of sound significant in a specific language (E.g., /s/ is a phoneme in English while the German ch sound /x/ is not) Grapheme - The symbols (letters) used in a writing system such as our alphabet Digraph - A single sound represented by two letters (e.g., th, sh, ea) Phonetic Alphabet - a collection of symbols used for writing words phonetically

24 More Terms Allophone - a variant of a phoneme; often not noticed by native speakers (e.g, spin, pin) Minimal Pair - Two words that are pronounced the same except for one sound (e.g., Sue, zoo) Voiced Sound - A sound produced with the vocal folds (cords) vibrating (e.g. voiced /z/ as opposed to voiceless /s/) Diphthong - “a double vowel sound” - two vowels appearing together as the nucleus of a syllable

25

26 The Consonants of English

27 The Vowels of English

28 Allomorphs Based on Phonology
The plural morpheme – [s] after a voiceless consonant [z] after a voiced consonant [\z] after a sibilant (s, z, sh, ch, or j) The past tense morpheme [d] after a voiced sound, [t] after a voiceless sound [\d] after a [t] or [d]


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