Title: Before we begin Chapter 7, lets review
1Before we begin Chapter 7, lets review
2Vocal Cord
- Glottis is the space between the vocal folds.
- Vocal folds are the two moving parts.
3Voice
- Breathy voice (murmur) ? A type of phonation in
which the vocal folds are only slightly apart so
that they vibrate while allowing a high rate of
airflow through the glottis, as in Hindi /??/. - Creaky voice (laryngealization) ? A type of
phonation in which the arytenoid cartilages hold
the posterior end of the vocal folds together so
that they can vibrate only at the other end, as
in Hausa /??/.
4Breathy voice
5Creaky voice
6Voice Onset Time (VOT)
- The interval between the release of a closure
(air) and the beginning of vocal cord vibration
(voicing). - In English, consonants with a VOT greater than 25
milliseconds are perceived as voiceless (such as
/p/), and VOTs less that 25 milliseconds are
perceived as voiced (such as /b/).
7Place and Manner of Articulation
- A course in PhoneticsChapter 7
8Place and Manner of Articulation
- Places of Articulation
- Manners of Articulation
- Summary of Manners of Articulation
9Nasals, Stops and FricativesTable 7.3, p. 147
10Places of ArticulationFig. 7.1, p. 140
11Bilabial fricatives
- Not in English, but in Ewe of West Africa
- Pronounced by bringing the two lips nearly
together, so that there is only a slit between
them. Examples ?, ? - Ewe
12Linguo-labials
- A few Austronesian languages spoken in Venuatu.
- The tongue touches the upper lip.
- Venen Taut has nasals, stops, and fricatives
made in this way.
13Linguo-labialsVenen Taut
14Contrasts of the place of articulation Malayalam
15Geminate consonant
- Long consonants that can be analyzed as double
are called geminates. - Example the long consonant in the middle of
Italian folla - Careful many English words are spelled with two
consonants, but these are NOT usually geminates
(e.g., running)
16Retroflex fricative ?
17Retroflex Fricative /?/
18Retroflex Fricative /?/
19Apical and Laminal
- Retroflex apical post-alveolar
- Palato-alveolar laminal post-alveolar
- Apical
- An articulaiton involving the tip of the tongue.
- Laminal
- An articulation made with the blade of the tongue.
20Alveolo-palatals ?,?
- These symbols are used for voiceless and voiced
fricatives in Polish and Chinese. - They are similar to ?,?, but have considerable
raising of the front of the tongue. - They are also made in the post-alveolar region.
21Alveolo-palatal soundsPolish
22Palatal sounds
- Palatal sounds can be defined as being made with
the front of the tongue approaching or touching
the hard palate, and with the tip of the tongue
down behind the lower front teeth. - The only true palatal in English is /j/, which is
usually an approximant but may be allophonically
a voiceless fricative in words such as hue.
23Palatal Lateral Approximant
24Velar stops and nasals ?,?,?
- Velar stops and nasals ?,?,? occur in English.
- But unlike other languages such as German, we no
longer have velar fricatives.
25Uvular fricative
- Uvular sounds are made by raising the back of the
tongue toward the uvula. - They do not occur at all in most forms of
English. - In French, a voiced uvular fricative ? is the
common form of r in words.
26Voiced uvular fricative or approximant French
27Uvular stops ?,?, and nasals, ?
- These sounds occur in Eskimo, Aleut, and other
American Indian languages. - One way of learning to produce uvular sounds is
to start from a voiceless velar fricative ?.
While making this sound, slide your tongue
slightly further back in your mouth so that it is
close to the uvula. The result will be the
voiceless uvular fricative ?.
28Velar Fricative /?/
29Velar Fricative /?/
30Contrasts involving stops in Quechua
- Palato-Alveolar Velar Uvular
31Pharyngeal sounds
- Pharyngeal sounds are produced by pulling the
root of the tongue back toward the back wall of
the pharynx. - Many people cannot make a stop at this position.
- It would be literally impossible to make a
pharyngeal nasal, for closure at the point would
prevent the airstream from coming through the
nose. - Pharyngeal fricatives, ?,?.
32Epiglottal sounds
- Epiglottal sounds are produced with a
constriction that is even deeper in the throat
than that in pharyngeal sounds. - The root of the epiglottis and the lowest part of
the pharynx just above the larynx form the
constriction. - Some Arabic speakers actually use epiglottal
rather than pharyngeal articulations in the words
described in the preceding paragraph.
33The simultaneous use of 2 places of articulation
- w Labial velars, or labiovelars
- The English approximant w has both an
approximation of the lips (making it a bilabial
sound) and of the back of the tongue and the soft
palate (making it a velar sound).
34Palatal Nasal sounds
35Place and Manner of Articulation
- Places of Articulation
- Manners of Articulation
- Summary of Manners of Articulation
36Stops
37Prenasalized stops in Margi
38Nasals
- Nasals can occur voiced or voiceless.
- As voiceless nasals are comparatively rare, they
are symbolized simply by adding the voiceless
diacritic ? under the symbol for the voiced
sound.
39Fricatives
- 2 ways to produce the rough turbulent flow that
occurs in the airstream during a fricative. - It may be just the result of the air passing
through a narrow gap, as in the formation of f. - It may be due to the airstream first becoming
speeded up by being forced through a narrow gap
and then being directed over a sharp edge, such
as the teeth, as in the production of s.
40Classification of Fricatives
- Voiced or voiceless
- Places of articulation
- Manner of production
41Trills, Taps, and Flaps
- Trills
- The tip of the tongue is set in motion by the
current of air - Tap or flap
- A tap or a flap is caused by a single contraction
of the muscles so that one articulator is thrown
against another. It is often just a very rapid
articulation of a stop.
42Symbols for types of r and for bilabial trills.
43Uvular Fricative (voiceless) /?/
44Uvular Fricative (voiced) /?/
45/?/ Voiced uvular trillFrench
46Laterals
- Voiced alveolar lateral approximant ?
- Voiced alveolar lateral fricative ??
- Voiceless alveolar lateral approximant ? ?
- Voiceless alveolar lateral fricative ?
47Lateral Fricative Sounds
48Place and Manner of Articulation
- Places of Articulation
- Manners of Articulation
- Summary of Manners of Articulation
49Manners of articulation