Title: English Consonants in Context
1Lecture 4
- English Consonants in Context
- (Ladefoged, Chapter 3)
-
2A Naïve View of An Utterance
- pH Q t kH aU n t s b i d z
- time ?
- each sound is uttered independent of its neighbors
3But sounds interact with neighboring sounds
- Here the context of the stop affects its
pronunciation - (1) (2) (3) (4)
(5) - pie buy spy nap nab
- tie die sty mat mad
- kye guy sky knack nag
4p vs. b
- pie has a voiceless aspirated p
- buy has a voiced b
- spy has a voiceless unaspirated p
- nap has a voiceless p that is either
- aspirated, released, or unreleased
- nab has a voiced b that is either
- released, or unreleased
5Prevocalic Stops Partial Voicing
- pie has a voiceless aspirated p
- buy has a partially voiced unaspirated b
-
- voicing depends on context
- nQb nQbIN
- nab nabbing
- partially voiced fully voiced
6Voicing of stops after /s/
- (A) (B)
- spy sby
- sty sdy
- sky sguy Is there an explanation
for the gap in (B)? - spill sbill
- still sdill
- skill sgill
7 Voicing Ambiguity accounts for a Systematic Gap
- spy has a partially voiced, unaspirated
bilabial stop - since this stop hangs half way
between p and b - we have spy, but no sby
8Postvocalic Stops Voicing Ambiguity
- nap has a voiceless p that is either
- aspirated, released, or unreleased
- nab has a partially voiced b that is either
- released, or unreleased
- How do we distinguish nap from nab when both
stops are unreleased and b is only partially
voiced?
9Postvocalic Stops Voicing Ambiguity
-
- the length of the previous vowel
- distinguishes voiced from voiceless stops
- nQp? nQ?b?
10Postvocalic Stops Place of Articulation
Ambiguity
- How do we distinguish among final, voiceless
stops if they are unreleased? - nap
- knat
- knack
- by the quality of the preceding vowel
11Postvocalic Stops
- my cat Mabel
- apt to go
- act now
- white teeth
- Final stops are released into the following nasal
or stop. - In English, two consecutive homorganic stops are
both articulated if a word boundary intervenes.
(Compare why teeth).
12- Give me a verbal negative response
- without opening your mouth.
-
13The Glottal Stop ? in English
- ?m?m No.
- American English kitten, Trenton, Clinton
- NY bottle
- Cockney butter, kitty, fatter
- The explosion caused by closing the glottis is
released in the following sound.
14Coarticulationthe overlap of adjacent
articulations
- ki ku k? /k/s are different
- tik tuk t?k /k/s are the same
- In English, place of articulation adapts to the
following sound - This is known as anticipatory, or regressive,
coarticulation
15Anticipatory Coarticulation
- key coo
- lips spread lips rounded
- tongue near hard palate tongue near soft palate
- see saw
- lips spread lips rounded
- be boo
- lips spread lips rounded
16Anticipatory Coarticulation (2)
- Due to neuromuscular commands (commands from
brain to articulators) - There is an inherent delay between the command
from the brain and the articulation - To compensate for this delay, commands are
initiated before the segment in which they are
required
17Coarticulation
- Regressive A ? B cupful
- Progressive A ? B cups/cubs
- English is primarily a regressive language
- French and Italian are progressive
- Why?
18Terminology
- Ladefoged
- Coarticulation is the overlapping of adjacent
articulations, as in the rounding of k before
u. - Assimilation is the change of one sound into
another sound because of the influence of
neighboring sounds, as in the change of
underlying /n/ to m in ImpUt. - Roca Johnson
- phonetics will help us to understand the
articulatory motivation behind these phenomena in
terms of coarticulation, the term by which
phoneticians express essentially what
phonologists refer to as assimilation.
19Stop Consonants in Context Review (1)
- Stops have 2 phases closure,release
- Prevocalic voiceless stops are aspirated except
after /s/ - Postvocalic stops can be aspirated, released,
unreleased - In stop C, stop is released in C
Qpt - s?dn - nasal plosion
- Qtl?s - lateral plosion
20Stop Consonants in Context Review (2)
- voiced stops are only partially voiced
- voicing is distinguished prevocalically by
presence or absence of aspiration - voicing is distinguished postvocalically by
length of the preceding vowel -
21Stop Consonants in Context Review (3)
- /t/, /d/ become
- ? before syllabic /n/ trEn?n
- R intervocalically cIRi
- vowel length distinguishes latter from ladder
- (evidence that there is an underlying /t/ or
/d/) - stops anticipate the following sound
(anticipatory coarticulation kip vs.kup )
22Talking Heads
- Techniques to Measure and Analyze Speech
Production
23Fricatives in Real Speech
- st?aIf st?aI?v
- ti? ti?D
- ?luS?n ?lu?Z?n
- loUf loU?vz
- f?s f??z
- m?? m??Dz seIf seI?v
24Fricatives (2)
- Vowels are longer and following fricatives
shorter when the fricative is voiced. -
25Fricatives (3)
- Vowel Length Rule
- V ? -long / ___ C
- -voice
- What VC strings does this rule cover?
26The Vowel Length Rule Covers Fricatives and Stops
- The Obstruent class of sounds
- involve significant obstruction of the airstream
- voicing affects length of preceding vowel
- voiced obstruents are not voiced throughout
unless the following sound is voiced - Surprise Pat.
- Thats surprising.
27The Fricative /h/
- bihEst ?hEd
- /h/ is signaled by a weakening of voicing.
-
- h w.
- wItS witch hwItS which
- h w is sometimes written as ?
- ? is now only used in the uncommon wh- words
(which, whether, but not what)
28Affricate stop homorganic C ts, dz, tT,
dD, tS, dZ wksht
- Distribution of Affricates
- kQts lQdz
- tsQk dzQl
- eitT eIdD
- tTIn dDIn
- tS??tS dZ?dZ
29Special Status of the Affricates tS and dZ
- Only tS and dZ occur at both beginning and end of
English words. - Therefore, these affricates are treated
phonologically as single units even though they
are represented phonetically as a sequence of two
phonemes.
30 Nasals Dictation
- Syllabic Nasals.
- s?d?n s?dn
- laIt?n lai?n
- ??k?n ??kn
- sEv?n sEbm
- dZQk Qnd keIt dZQk N keIt
- kAnt?nEnt?l kAnnEnl
31 The Velar Nasal Dictation
- (A) (B) (C)
- sIN? singer fINg? finger l?Ng? longer
- stIN? stinger lINg? linger j?Ng? younger
- Q Why is the /g/ retained in (B-C) but not in
(A)?
32Approximants
- Syllabic /l/.
- bAt?l bARl
- p?d?l p?Rl
33Approximants (2)
- Distribution of English /l/
- lif fi?
- lIt tI?
- lI? l??
- postvocalic /l/, written ?, is velarized
34Likelihood of Allophonic Variation in Consonants
- Consonant Sensitivity to Context
- stop high
- fricative moderate
- nasal low
- approximant low
35Why Learn about Consonants in Context?
- ESL/EFL concentrates on the learning of segments
that are absent from the source L - T and D
- ? and l
- But allophonic variation plays a large role in
non-native accents -
36Allophonic variation in accents
-
- I?z ? Is (vowel is not long)
- pHIl ? pIl (initial voiceless stop is not
aspirated) - goUt ? goUt (initial stop is fully
voiced) - l??v ? ??f (initial l is velarized vowel is
not long) - http//classweb.gmu.edu/accent/