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Linguistics week 6 Phonetics 3.

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Presentation on theme: "Linguistics week 6 Phonetics 3."— Presentation transcript:

1 Linguistics week 6 Phonetics 3

2 How many words, morphemes, syllables, consonants and vowels in the following? Count semivowels as consonants. Greenhouse Red houses Women 我們 Those sheep 老鼠 老太太 玻璃 John drinks coffee 他不喝咖啡

3 Syllable patterns (actually this is part of Phonology)
With few exceptions, all syllables have exactly one vowel (V) In Mandarin, there exist 3 possible patterns V CV CVC, where the last C must be [n] or [ŋ] English is more flexible CCCVCCCC is possible, but still only one vowel

4 Check table 6.2, p243

5 Parameters for describing consonants
So far (this is not complete yet) we have Airstream (usually the same for all consonants) Place of articulation Voicing Manner of articulation So, [p] is … egressive pulmonic bilabial voiceless plosive

6 Homework: consonants For all the plosives, nasals and fricatives that exist in English Learn the IPA or US system phonetic symbols IPA is often the same as KK, and all 3 systems are pretty similar Learn how to describe each one in terms of the four parameters, like we just did for [p]

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9 More manners of articulation:
Trills (articulators collide rapidly and repeatedly) Bilabial (brrr: not really part of English) [ʙ] Alveolar (perro dog, in Spanish) [r] Uvular (Paris, in French) [ʀ] Tap (usually alveolar) Like a trill, but only one collision In Spanish pero but [ɾ]

10 And glottal consonants…
The glottal stop [ʔ] Usually without plosion Used in Cantonese 識唔識, 得唔得 Taiwanese? And English, in London accent! The glottal fricative [h] is generally used to represent English “h”, and ㄏ spoken by Taiwanese people In mainland Mandarin, it’s [x], a velar fricative

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12 Some other fricative sounds
Mandarin has a voiceless retroflex fricative It is [ʂ], representing ㄕ Retroflexion means that the tongue is curled There is also a voiced retroflex fricative [ʐ], aka ㄖ However, some people transcribe this as [ɻ] They believe it is a retroflex approximant And, there is a voiceless alveolo-palatal fricative [ɕ], or ㄒ (only the consonantal part)

13 Affricates A plosive followed by a homorganic fricative
Homorganic = “same place of articulation” so [kf] in breakfast is not an affricate, because [k] and [f] do not have the same place of artic. [ʣ] and [ʦ] are affricates, but are not normally treated so in English phonology The only affricate English phonemes are /ʤ/ and /ʧ/

14 Affricates in Mandarin
/tsʰ/ and /ts/ /tʂʰ/ and /tʂ/ /tɕʰ/ and /tɕ/ Can you guess what they are? What is the ʰ? Why have I suddenly started using /asd/ instead of [asd]? (slant brackets instead of square brackets) ㄘ and ㄗ ㄔ and ㄓ(retroflex affricate) ㄐ and ㄑ(alveolo-palatal affricate)

15 Aspiration Aspirated and unaspirated consonants
ㄅ is unaspirated [p] ㄆ is aspirated [ph] (puff of air) English: spit vs pit (aspiration difference) Compare pit vs bit That is a voicing difference Aspiration is much less important in English than in Chinese Can you explain why?

16 Mandarin sounds (not yet)

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18 IPA: approximants (all voiced)
An approximant occurs as a consonant in syllabic patterning (CVC) but, it’s like a vowel, because the articulators usually don’t touch. 2 common realizations of /r/ (in addition to the trills described earlier) [ɻ] retroflex approximant of Mandarin [ɹ] alveolar approximant of English A palatal approximant [j], often corresponding to the English spelling “y” A labial (=with rounded lips) velar approximant [w] Then there is lateral approximant [l] Lateral = “side”, that is where the obstruction is


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