Title: Ling 240: Language and Mind
1Ling 240 Language and Mind
2Phonetics
- The study of physical properties of sound
- Sounds may not be represented systematically by
spelling. - Examples?
3Why not just spell?
- Sounds may not be represented systematically by
spelling because... - Same spelling for different sounds
- Combination of letters representing one sound,
- Some letters are silent
4Phonetic Alphabet
- One symbol represents one sound
- Each speech sound has a distinct symbol
- Cross-linguistically applicable
5 6(No Transcript)
7IPA symbols for Transcription
k car gguard f foot v van
h hat mmull n null ? ring
8IPA symbols for transcription
- s sap
- z zip
- ? think
- ð this
? shine ? vision ? touch ? judge
? ring l leaf j yes w with
9IPA symbols for transcription
u boot ?put ? open
æash ? father ?about ? but
10Diphthongs (Complex Vowels)
- Complex because they are two-part vowels
- But count as a single sound because two vowels
are articulated together. Examples - ?? bite
- ?? boy
- e? bait
11IPA symbols for transcription
PRACTICE! (Remember brackets!)
- next chin lamb
- kite cat meet
12IPA symbols for transcription
PRACTICE!
- next n?kst chin ??n lamb læm
-
- kite k??t cat kæt meet mit
13The Vocal Tract
14Consonants vs. Vowels
- consonantal sounds obstruction of airflow in
vocal tract - vowel sounds little to no obstruction of airflow
15Features of Consonants
- Voicing (state of the glottis)
- Place of articulation
- Manner of articulation
- Site for listening to the sounds of American
English - http//www.uiowa.edu/acadtech/phonetics/english/
frameset.html
16Voicing
17Voicing
18Place of Articulation
- Articulator Organ a speaker employs to produce
and distinguish certain speech sound (e.g. lips
are active articulators and hard plate is a
passive articulator) - Place of articulation Identifies the location of
articulators
19Place of Articulation
- Bilabial p b m w
- Labiodental f v
- Interdental ? ð
- Alveolar t d n s z l ?
- Palatal ? ? ? ? j
- Velar k g ?
20Manners of articulation
- Stops p b t d k g
- Fricatives f v ? ð s z ? ?
- Affricates ? ?
- Liquids l ?
- Glides w j
21Consonant Chart for English
22Phonetic features of consonants
- To describe phonetic features of consonants, list
(a) voicing (b) place of articulation and (c)
manner of articulation for consonants (3
features) - e.g. p Voiceless bilabial stop
- z Voiced alveolar fricative
-
23Features of vowels
- All vowels in English are voiced and involve a
continuous flow of air through the oral cavity.
English vowels can be categorized by 4
distinctive features - (1) Height of the tongue
- (2) Frontness/backness of the tongue
- (3) Tenseness/laxness i.e. whether the tongue
muscle is tense or lax - (4) Round/unrounded i.e. whether the lips are
rounded or not
24Every vowel is a combination of 4 features.
- i as in meet is high front tense unrounded
vowel - æ as in pat is low front lax unrounded
- ? as in pot is low back lax unrounded
25Vowels of English
26What knowledge do we have about the sounds of our
native language?
- We know which sounds are distinctive
- e.g. l and r are perceived as different
sounds in English but not in Japanese - We know which sounds can (and cant combine)
- e.g. Are these possible English words?
- mbeem, tsub, coofb
27What do we know about sound in (and not in) our
language?
- Recognize foreign accents
- How does a French speaker pronounce the word
this? - How does a German speaker pronounce the word
think? - http//www.youtube.com/watch?v64vBaFOfawI