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Chapter 2 Phonetics English Linguistics: An Introduction.

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1 Chapter 2 Phonetics English Linguistics: An Introduction

2 Chapter 2 Phonetics 0. Warm-up Questions 1. Introduction 2. Phonetic Production 3. Phonetic Transcription 4. Phonetic Classification & Description

3 0. Warm-up Questions  Can you name any of the speech organs?  Do you know how different sounds are produced?  What distinguishes the articulation of vowels and consonants?  How can a phonetician identify the number of distinctive sounds in a language?  What are ways of classifying vowels or consonants?

4 1. Introduction  The study of speech sounds as they are, namely their production, transmission and perception. Speech production Speech perception Figure 1 The process of speech transmission Transmission 1.2 Branches Thus the study falls into three main areas: articulatory phonetics, acoustic phonetics and auditory phonetics. 1.1 Definition  The study of speech sounds as they are, namely their production, transmission and perception.

5 2. Phonetic Production Lips, teeth, tongue (tip, blade, front, back, root) teeth ridge (alveolus), hard palate, soft palate (velum), uvula, pharynx, larynx, vocal folds (cords/bands), trachea (windpipe), lung. 1 上唇; 2 上齿; 3 上齿背; 4 上齿 龈; 5 硬腭; 6 软腭; 7 悬雍垂; 8 鼻腔; 9 咽部; 10 声带; 11 下唇; 12 舌尖; 13 舌前; 14 口腔; 15 舌 中; 16 舌后。 (此图参照了 David Crystal , The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Language , p157 ,外语教学与研究出版社, 2002 )

6 3. Phonetic Transcription 3.2 International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) 3.1 Divergence  Examples: fish spelt as ghoti (enough + women + nation), bee read as /bi:/  Reasons: more sounds than symbols, changes of sounds, borrowed words  History and development: The idea proposed (1886), the first version published (1888), International Phonetic Association known (1897), rudimental system of IPA (1920s), the latest version revised (1993), updated twice (1996, 2005).

7 3. Phonetic Transcription 3.3 Coarticulation and Phonetic Transcription 3.2 International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA)  Main principles: There should be a separate letter for each distinctive sound, and the same symbol should be used for that sound in any language in which it appears.  The Chart of IPA (see p28 in the textbook)  Coarticulation: The process involving simultaneous and overlapping articulations as a result of the influence on a sound by its neighbors e.g. thin /θin/ think /θiηk/ (anticipatory) books /buks/ beds /bedz/ (perseverative)

8 3. Phonetic Transcription 3.3 Coarticulation and Phonetic Transcription  Broad / narrow transcriptions: without or with diacritics Diacritics (p29): symbols used for transcription of the minute difference between variations of the same sound e.g. peak /pi:k/ (broad/phonemic) peak [p h i:k] (narrow/phonetic) In the case, an aspirated sound is transcribed with a raised “h” after the symbol.

9 4. Classification and Description 4.2 Classification of English consonants 4.1 The First Distinction  Vowels / consonants: with(out) airstream obstruction  Semi-vowels or semi-consonants /w/ and /j/

10 4. Classification and Description 4.3 Classification of English Vowels  Monophthongs (pure/cardinal vowels) and diphthongs (vowel glides)  Pure vowels: Tongue rising, Raised part, Tenseness (length), Lip rounding

11 4. Classification and Description 4.4 Phonetic Description  Description of consonants [p] voiceless bilabial stop [z] voiced alveolar fricative  Description of vowels [u] high back lax rounded [æ] low front lax unrounded


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