Title: Overview: linguistics and phonetics
1Overview linguistics and phonetics
- Theoretical Linguistics
- Phonology, Morphology, Syntax, Semantics,
Phonetics(?) - Applied Linguistics
- Language Acquisition
- Language Processing
- Human, Machine
- Sociolinguistics
- Historical linguistics
- Phonetics(?)
2What is phonetics?
- Phonetics
- Studies of speech sound
- Interests of Phonetics
- Produced by human vocal organs
- Excluding thunder, bird chirping etc.
- Produced for communication purpose
- Excluding coughs, hiccups, sneezing, gnashing,
etc. - Linguistically meaningful sounds
- Used for pronouncing words
3What is phonetics? (cntd.)
- The speech sounds vary depending upon languages
- (eg. Click sounds are speech sounds for Swahili,
but not for English or Korean)
4Types of Phonetics
- Articulatory Phonetics
- Auditory Phonetics
- Acoustic Phonetics
5Phonetics vs. Phonology
- Common properties
- Studies on Sound Structure
- Pronunciation instead of orthography
6Phonetics vs Phonology (differences)
Phonetics Phonology
Level of grammar Surface, concrete Deep, abstract
Closely related to Acoustics, physics, biology Linguistics
Philosophical relevance Performance Competence
Status of speech Consecutive, temporal Segmental
Basic unit Phone Phoneme
Transcription method Narrow Broad
7Phonetics and its Application
- Relevant fields
- Speech technology
- Speech synthesis
- Speech recognition
- Automatic translation
- Speech pathology
- Language teaching
8Meanings and Distinction of Basic Terminology
- Phone
- Phoneme
- Allophone
- Morpheme
- Allomorph
- Contrast
9Terminology (cntd.)
- Phone
- The minimal unit of speech sound
- Different phones have different quality
- Depending upon physical quality of sounds
- A substantial surface entity
- Transcribed in (eg. p, m)
10Terminology (cntd.)
- Phoneme
- The minimal unit that distinguishes meaning
- Phonemes do not carry meanings themselves.
- The unit that makes the connection between sound
and meaning - The basic unit of the contrast in phonology
- An abstract entity
- Transcribed in / / (eg. /p/ /m/)
11Terminology (cntd.)
- Allophone (phonetic variant)
- Segments which are derived from the same phoneme
- Reflects relationship between phoneme and phones
- Gives a criterion for speech sound grouping
- Guess to which allophone is closer, phoneme
or phone?
12Terminology (cntd.)
- Examples for phone/phoneme/allophone
- Consider sounds in the words
- goose, geese, glee, glue
- pine, speak, stop
13Terminology (cntd.)
- Phonemes and allophones are language dependent
concepts - English and Korean liquids
- English and Korean stops
- Voicing
- Manners
14Terminology (cntd.)
- How to distinguish phonemes from phones(or
allophones) in a language - Minimal pair
- Two word strings which has only one segmental
difference at the same position - (Eg. vine/pine, though/dough)
- Complementary distribution
- Mutual exclusiveness
- Different allophones of the same phoneme do not
occur in the same linguistic environment
15Terminology (cntd.)
- Morpheme
- The minimal unit that bears meaning
- Compare with phoneme
- Variants of the same morpheme
- Different morphemes have different meanings but
may sound the same -gt Homophone (homonym) - Eg. tea/tee, flower/flour, too/two
16Terminology (cntd.)
- Allomorph
- Two different forms derived from the same
morpheme - The same meaning
- Eg. leaveslivz/leaflif
17Terminology (cntd.)
- Contrast
- The fact that different phonemes distinguish the
words of a language from one another - Eg. p vs b
- Opposition, distinction
18Speech Physiology
- Contents
- Vocal organs
- Three processes of speech production
- Initiation
- Phonation
- Articulation
19Initiation
- To make sounds air is necessary
- Initiation is the process of creating air stream
- Three ways of initiation
- Pulmonic airstream mechanism Lung
- Glottalic airstream mechanism Glottis
- Velaric airstream mechanism velum
20Phonation
- To produce speech sounds, air stream should be
distorted in one way or another - Phonation is a process of changing air stream
- Phonation is mainly achieved at larynx
21Principal speech organs
- Lung, Trachea(windpipe)
- Larynx
- Vocal folds (chords, cords)
- Glottis
- Vocal tract
- Pharynx
- Nasal tract
- Oral tract
22Larynx
- The upper portion of the windpipe which produces
speech - Major components
- Vocal cords
- Glottis
- epiglottis
- Three cartilages
- Thyroid, Arytenoid, Cricoid
23Larynx midsagittal view
24Larynx lateral view
25Larynx posterior view
26Vocal cords
27Articulation
- A variety of speech sounds can be produced in
terms of another way of air stream change
Articulation - Articulation is done mainly somewhere at vocal
tract
28 29English Consonants
- Criteria for distinction
- Voicing
- Place of articulation
- Manner of articulation
- Secondary articulation
30Voicing
- Related to phonation
- Voiced
- Vocal cords vibrating
- Voiceless
- Glottis kept open
- Examples
- p, t, k, s
31Places of articulation
- bilabial
- labiodental
- interdental
- (apico)dental
- alveolar
- alveopalatal (postalveolar, palato-alveolar)
- palatal
- (dorso)velar
- uvular
- pharyngeal
- glottal
32Manners of articulation
- Obstruents
- stop (plosive)
- complete closure
- release
- fricative
- partial obstruction
- turbulence airflow
- affricate
- stop fricative
- Sonorants
- nasal
- liquid
- lateral
- central
- flap(tap)
- trill (eg. French uvular trill R)
- approximant
33English Consonant chart
Bi-labial Labio- dental Inter- dental Alveolar Alveo- palatal Palatal Velar Glottal
Stop p/b t/d k/g ?
Fricative f/v ?/ð s/z š/ž h/?
Affricate c/??
Nasal m ? n ?
Liquid (lateral) l ?
Liguid (central) r(?)
Flap ?
Glide (w) y(j) w
34Describing symbols
- voicing-place-manner
- examples
- p voiceless bilabial stop
- z voiced alveolar fricative
- Class description
- p, t, k voiceless stops
35English Vowels
- Criteria for distinguishing between various
vowels - tongue height
- tongue backness
- tenseness
- lip rounding
- nasality
- length
36Vowel(monophthong)
front front central central back back
unr rnd unr rnd unr rnd
high tense
high lax
mid tense
mid lax
low
low
37Vowel(monophthong) chart IPA symbols in
brackets
front front central central back back
unr rnd unr rnd unr rnd
high tense ?? ? ??
high lax ?? ??
mid tense ?? ?/? ? ??
mid lax ?e ?/? ? (??)
low ? ? (?) ?? ?
low ? (?) ?? ?
38Diphthongs
- Definition
- A diphthong is a phonetic sequence, consisting of
a vowel and a glide, that is interpreted as a
single vowel. - Types
- On-glide diphthong Glide Vowel
- Off-glide diphthong Vowel Glide
39Diphthongs(cntd.)
- Examples of on-glide diphthongs
a ? i ? u ?
j
w
40Diphthongs(cntd.)
- Examples of on-glide diphthongs
a ? i ? u ?
j ya ja y? j? yi ji y? j? yu ju y? j?
w wa w? wi w? wu w?
41Diphthongs (cntd.)
- Examples of off-glide diphthongs (American
English) - midwestern dialect
- a? e? a? ?? ??
- California dialect
- a? a? ??
- See
- http//www.ling.mq.edu.au/courses/ling210-901/cour
se/phonetics/vowelgraphs/USE_Diphthongs.html
42Diacritics for secondary articulation
articulation diacritic example words
aspirated C? pin, repeat
glottalized C? spin, string
unreleased C? stop, kick
devoiced C? play, hush
dentalized C? tenth, cupful
palatalized Cj(Cy) keep, beep
labialized C? cool, boot
velarized C?, ? table
syllabic C C? button, bottle
nasalized v? mean, nose
43Describing symbols
- voicing-(place 2nd)-place-(manner 2nd)-manner
- examples
- p voiceless bilabial stop
- ph voiceless bilabial aspirated stop
- py voiceless palatalized bilabial stop
- phy voiceless bilabial aspirated stop