Consonants and vowels John Goldsmith. Kinds of phonetics Transcribing: descriptive phonetics? transcriptional phonetics? No standard name. Articulatory.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Normal Aspects of Articulation. Definitions Phonetics Phonology Articulatory phonetics Acoustic phonetics Speech perception Phonemic transcription Phonetic.
Advertisements

Sounds that “move” Diphthongs, glides and liquids.
Phonetics.
Hello, Everyone! Review questions  Give examples to show the following features that make human language different from animal communication system:
IA Session Two Phonetics v phonology Describing the sounds of English Teaching pronunciation.
Phonetics Articulatory Phonetics; *Manner of Articulation:
Phonology, part 5: Features and Phonotactics
Phonetics Class # 2 Chapter 6. Consonants – Place of articulation Bilabial Labiodental Interdental Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal.
Practical Phonetics Week 2
Digital Systems: Hardware Organization and Design
Phonetics: The Sounds of Language
ASPECTS OF LINGUISTIC COMPETENCE 2 SEPT 04, 2013 – DAY 4 Brain & Language LING NSCI Harry Howard Tulane University.
Phonetics (Part 1) Dr. Ansa Hameed.
Speech Anatomy and Articulation
ING507 Linguistics The Nature of Language
Ling 240: Language and Mind Phonetics. Phonetics The study of physical properties of sound Sounds may not be represented systematically by spelling. Examples?
Spectrogram & its reading
Chapter 6 Features PHONOLOGY (Lane 335).
Vowels Vowels are the most sonorant (or intense) and the most audible sounds in speech. They usually function as the nucleus (or core) of a syllable. The.
Yun-Pi Yuan1 Phonetics I. DefinitionDefinition II.Consonants A. Definition B. Voicing C. Place of Articulation D. Manner of Articulation E. Computer Software.
Phonetics and Phonology 1.4; 3.1, 3.2, 3.3, 3.4, 3.5 (ex.) 4.1, 4.2, 4.3; Ref. 3.8 Homework: 3.6, #1-7, #8 (choose any three) [Mar 5]
Sounds of English Class 2.
Consonants and vowel January Review where we’ve been We’ve listened to the sounds of “our” English, and assigned a set of symbols to them. We.
Chapter 3 Phonetics: Describing Sounds. Phonetics -study of speech sounds Sounds and symbols --use a system of written symbols --one sound represents.
Phonetics: The Sounds of Language CONSONANT SOUNDS.
Step 1: Memorize IPA - practice quiz today - real quiz on Tuesday (over consonants)! Phonology is about looking for patterns and arguing your assessment.
Linguistics I Chapter 4 The Sounds of Language.
The sounds of language Phonetics Chapter 4.
Phonetics HSSP Week 5.
Phonetics and Phonology
Phonetics Phonetics: It is the science of speech sounds. It is the study of the production and reception of speech sounds. It is concerned with the sounds.
LING 001 Introduction to Linguistics Fall 2010 Sound Structure I: Phonetics Articulatory phonetics Phonetic transcription Jan. 25.
Phonetics The study of speech sounds. What’s the problem here? Each, ache, chandelier Great, bait, fate, reign Laugh, fix, phony.
Chapter 2 Speech Sounds Phonetics and Phonology
1 4. Consonants  Consonants are produced ‘ by a closure in the vocal tract, or by a narrowing which is so marked that air cannot escape without producing.
The Sounds of Language. Phonology, Phonetics & Phonemics… Phonology, Phonetics & Phonemics… Producing and writing speech sounds... Producing and writing.
An Introduction to Linguistics
Phonology, part 4: Distinctive Features
Today we are going to learn about: Speech sounds Anomotical production.
Introduction to Linguistics Ms. Suha Jawabreh Lecture # 7.
Phonological and Phonemic Awareness Jeanne M. Maggiacomo Spring 2014 EDC424.
Phonetics Class # 2 Chapter 6. Homework (Ex. 1 – page 268)  Judge [d ] or [ ǰ ]  Thomas [t]  Though [ ð ]  Easy [i]  Pneumonia [n]  Thought [ θ.
SPEECH ORGANS & ARTICULATION
Phonetics: Dimensions of Articulation October 13, 2010.
Phonetics 2. Phonology 2.1 The phonic medium of language Sounds which are meaningful in human communication constitute the phonic medium of language.
What is phonetics? Phonetics is the scientific study of speech sounds. It consists of three main sub-fields:  Articulatory phonetics  = how speech sounds.
Phonetics Mia Armour Grand Canyon University September 24, 2006 Running head: Phonetics.
Linguistics for Everyone
Chapter II phonology II. Classification of English speech sounds Vowels and Consonants The basic difference between these two classes is that in the production.
Introduction to Language Phonetics 1. Explore the relationship between sound and spelling Become familiar with International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA )
Phonetics: The Sounds of Language CONSONANT SOUNDS.
Stop + Approximant Acoustics
Phonetics Overview/review Transcription Describing Phones Drills Overview/review Transcription Describing Phones Drills.
Ch4 – Features Features are partly acoustic partly articulatory aspects of sounds but they are used for phonology so sometimes they are created to distinguish.
Linguistics week 6 Phonetics 3.
Phonetics Description and articulation of phones.
King Faisal University [ ] 1 E-learning and Distance Education Deanship Department of English Language College of Arts King Faisal University Introduction.
Welcome to all.
Phonetics LIN 001Y Section - A09 1/20/2017.
ARTICULATORY PHONETICS
Linguistics: Phonetics
Speech 1 Sept 11, 2017 – DAY 6 Brain & Language
Introduction to Linguistics
Sounds of Language: fənɛ́tɪks
Essentials of English Phonetics
Introduction to Linguistics
Speech is made up of sounds.
Spoken language phonetics: Transcription, articulation, consonants
Phonetics: The Sounds of Language
CONSONANTS ARTICULATORY PHONETICS. Consonants When we pronounce consonants, the airflow out of the mouth is completely blocked, greatly restricted, or.
Presentation transcript:

Consonants and vowels John Goldsmith

Kinds of phonetics Transcribing: descriptive phonetics? transcriptional phonetics? No standard name. Articulatory phonetics Acoustic phonetics Perceptual phonetics (Psychology) Computational phonetics (CS)

Articulatory apparatus

Some (not so happy) assumptions generally made to do transcriptions There is a (1-dimensional) sequence of units that define or characterize the utterance – rather than 2 or more parallel streams. We think of the articulators as being a single instrument rather than as an orchestra. We can slice the utterances into pieces vertically, in time, and ignore most differences in duration. Sounds follow one another, and that’s it: there is no packing of them into groups.

Sounds of English Consonants: first, the stops: b as in bat, sob, cubby d as in date, hid, ado g as in gas, lag, ragged p as in pet, tap, repeat t as in tap, pet, attack k as in king, pick, picking When we need to emphasize that we are using a phonetic transcription, we put square brackets [b] around the symbols.

More consonants: fricatives f as in fail, life v as in veil, live Ɵ as in thin, wrath ð as in this, bathe s as in soft, miss z as in zoo, as š (American) or ʃ (IPA) as in shame, mash ž (American) or ǯ (IPA)as in triage, garage, azure, h as in help, vehicular

affricates č (American) or t ʃ (IPA) as in cheap, hatch ǰ (American) or ʤ (IPA) as in jump, hedge

nasal consonants m as in map, him n as in knot, tin (alveolar POA) ñ as in canyon ŋ as in sing, gingham, dinghy

Liquids l as in large, gull r as in red, jar

glides and semi-consonants y (American) or j (IPA) as in boy, yellow w as in wall, cow

6 stops 2 affricates 9 fricatives 4 nasals 2 liquids 2 glides

Short vowels Front: I as in bit Ɛ as in bet æ as in bat Back as in put ʌ as in putt  as in bought a or ɑ as in Mott, ma, spot ǝ “schwa” as in about

Long vowels iyor i as in beet eyor ej as in bait ay as in bite oy as in boy uw or u as in boot ow as in boat aw as how

Review where we’ve been We’ve listened to the sounds of “our” English, and assigned a set of symbols to them. We abstracted away from pitch, loudness, and duration. We hope to better understanding our language’s sounds by analyzing them as being composed of a sequence of identifiable sounds, each of which occurs frequently in words of the language.

Frequently? If a sound occurs in just 2 or 3 words, we don’t take it seriously (glottal stop, velar fricative) We do this against the background knowledge that the inventory of sounds in English is not necessary as human languages go: they are what they are against a much wider backdrop of possible linguistic sounds.

We also attempt to physically characterize these sounds: acoustically and articulatorily. Consonants are easier to characterize articulatorily, vowels acoustically. We are particularly interested in those ways in which the English of Speaker 1 is different from the English of Speaker 2: again, working against the background knowledge of variation.

We also characterize differences of sounds across sound contexts: we say, notice the different sound that occurs in front of a voiceless consonant in height. Looking ahead to phonology, we will attempt to get a handle on variation in sounds in two ways: –Two sounds are similar if (roughly) we can characterize one of them as a variant of the other used in a particular context (“under the influence of that context,” so to speak) –Two sounds are distinct (hence, different) if two distinct words differ only with regard to these two sounds, in otherwise identical positions

We try to characterize the inventory of sounds in a language, knowing that that language chose one set of sounds when a vast range of other possibilities might have been chosen.

Symbols We assign symbols to these sounds; in addition, we want to characterize them as best we can articulatorily and acoustically. Sounds can be divided into two major groups, consonants and vowels; or set along a continuum known as the sonority hierarchy:

Sonority hierarchy Vowels Glides Liquids Nasals Obstruents: –Fricatives –Affricates –Stops

Consonants Consonants = obstruents + sonorants –Obstruents: (oral) stops, affricates, and fricatives –Sonorants: nasals and liquids (l,r)

Consonants have a point of articulation The crucial points of articulation for English consonants are: Labial Labio-dental Dental Alveolar: at the alveolar ridge, behind the teeth Post-alveolar/palato-alveolar/alveopalatal: multiple names for the same thing Retroflex (r only) Palatal (y, ñ) Velar Laryngeal

Obstruents: 6 stops 9 fricatives 2 affricates Nasals (4) 2 other sonorants (what are they?) 2 glides

Vowels Vowels are harder to characterize articulatorily, but we try! The fact that it’s harder is reflected in the fact that there is more than one way in which it’s done. IPA is one way; American is another.

IPA

Two systems side by side

A phonetic chart based on the first two formants

From:

/i/ green /ae/ hat /u/ boot graphics thanks to Kevin Russell, Univ of Manitoba

“Hi” /haj/ we were away a year ago FORMANTS