Title: Airstream Mechanisms
1Airstream Mechanisms
- Taps, Flaps, Trills Non-Pulmonic Consonants,
LING 3330 SPRING 2009 - 2-16-09
2Taps, Flaps, Trills
- This aspect of articulation has to do more with
timing than with the nature of the events
involved - NOTE (IPA fonts in this ppt are either Arial or
Arial Unicode MS)
Adapted from Asbey Maidment. 2005
3Taps
- Consider the consonant d (a voiced alveolar
plosive) - Where does your tongue touch in the words door
hood? - Now considrer ? (a voiced alveolar tap)
- Where does your tongue touch in words like
atom, ladder, rider? - The event sequence is essentially the same, but
the timing is quite different
Adapted from Asbey Maidment. 2005
4Timing Comparison
Adapted from Asbey Maidment. 2005
5Taps
- The typical time for a tap is 20ms
- much shorter than a typical plosive and thus
there is not much time for an appreciable
pressure buildup - Taps then are considered Sonorants
Adapted from Asbey Maidment. 2005
6Flaps
- While similar to a Tap the flap is actually
different - like a tap it is also an extremely brief
closure - A tap the active articulator moves toward,
touches and moves, back away from the passive
articulator - unlike a tap the active articulator moves
towards, strikes, and then passes by the passive
articulator. - There is only one flap in the pulmonic
consonant part of the IPA chart - a voiced retroflex flap ?
- (also one in the extra symbols ?, alveolar
lateral flap)
Adapted from Asbey Maidment. 2005
7Flap in Punjabi sa?i burnt
Adapted from Asbey Maidment. 2005
8Trills
- Sometimes called a roll
- this sound consist of a series of very rapid
tap-like closures between the active and
passive articulators. - This vibration is similar to that of the vocal
folds, but is much slower due to the mass of the
structures involved - Spanish uses a contrast between ? and r as in
pero but and perro dog
Adapted from Asbey Maidment. 2005
9Trills
- Other trills are found throughout the worlds
languages - Voiced uvular trill R is reasonably common
- the uvula trills against the back of the tongue
- it sounds a little like a gargle
- A rarer trill is a bilabial trill B
- similar to Amer English use of Brrrr to indicate
being cold (another example)
Adapted from Asbey Maidment. 2005
10Speech Airflow
- In speech the compression and rarefactions are
achieved by using muscles to move some par of the
vocal tract or respiratory system - The moving parts act like the pistons in a pump
and is called the initiator of the airstream - We are quite good at regulating the airflow from
the lungs by the adjustment of the glottis
Adapted from Clark, Yallop, Fletcher. 2007
11Airstream Generation
- Air movement always flows from a region of high
pressure to region of low pressure - Air movement in the vocal apparatus depends on
the creation of pressure differences - Since air is a gas it is compressible
- Making the space smaller without letting air
molecules escape causes compression and pressure
rises - the opposite of compression is rarefaction when
the space is enlarged w/o letting in more
molecules.
Adapted from Asbey Maidment. 2005
12Speech organs articulation
- Showing the 4 main components of the speech
mechanism
Adapted from Clark, Yallop, Fletcher. 2007
13Airstream Mechanisms
- based on Pike (1943) the sources of energy for
generating speech sounds have become to be known
as Airstream Mechanisms - There are three basic types
- Lung Airflow (Pulmonic)
- Glottalic Airflow
- Velaric Airflow
Adapted from Clark, Yallop, Fletcher. 2007
14Pulmonic Airflow
- along with the reparatory cycle lung air is basic
to speech production - In principle, air flowing into or out of the
lungs during respiration may be used to generate
speech sounds - The nature of the sound produced will be
dependent on the shape of the vocal tract
Adapted from Clark, Yallop, Fletcher. 2007
15Pulmonic Airflow
- The two types of air are commonly referred to as
- Egressive Pulmonic air
- outward air
- typical or normal mode
- Easier to control and requires less overall
articulatory effort in sustained speech - speakers an exploit the relaxation pressure
available when the lungs are relatively full, and
can thus expel air in a slow, controlled fashion. - Ingressive Pulmonic air
Adapted from Clark, Yallop, Fletcher. 2007
16Pulmonic Airflow
- The two types of air are commonly referred to as
- Egressive Pulmonic air
- Seems to be the NORM in all languages.
- Ingressive Pulmonic air
- While it can be used no language in the world
seems to use it as a distinctive feature of
particular speech sounds during NORMAL
articulation
Adapted from Clark, Yallop, Fletcher. 2007
17Non-Pulmonic Airflow
Adapted from Clark, Yallop, Fletcher. 2007
18Glottalic Airflow
- Sometime called pharyngeal
- uses air above the glottis.
- The glottis is closed the larynx is moved up
and down in the pharyngeal cavity by controlling
extrinsic laryngeal muscles to initiate airflow - This movement causes the larynx to function like
a plunger or a piston in a cylinder - When the Larynx moves
- up Egressive glottalic airflow
- down ingressive glottalic airflow
Adapted from Clark, Yallop, Fletcher. 2007
19Ejectives
- Sounds made with Egressive Glottalic Airflow are
commonly know as Ejectives - or sometimes as glottalized stops
- Try taking a breath
- Hold it in (shutting off the glottis)
- try to utter the sounds p, t, k, s w/o opening
the glottis - (try saying the k sound in sick or the t in
spit) - Typically English speakers only use ejectives
when a silent pause follows or when being
decisive as in Definitely noT
Adapted from C,Y, F. 2007 AM 2005
20Ejectives
- The sounds using egressive glottalic airstream
- generally precede or follow sounds using normal
pulmonic air flow b/c the laryngeal movement
produces relatively weak and short airflow. - Found in Caucasus area and in a variety of Lgs in
Africa and The Americas - Hausa has an ejective velar stop k / pulmonic
velar stop k contrast
Adapted from Clark, Yallop, Fletcher. 2007
21Sequence of a Ejective Velar Stop
Adapted from Asbey Maidment. 2005
22Implosives
- As a result, there is often some upward leakage
of lung air sufficient to cause involuntary
phonation (voicing) - According to Ladefoged (1971) the upward leakage
might offset the airflow to an extend that the
net airflow is actually egressive - However, the important feature of the sound
quality is do to the effects of the rapid
lowering of the larynx
Adapted from Clark, Yallop, Fletcher. 2007
23Implosives
- Sounds using Ingressive Glottalic Airflow
- For these sounds the Larynx is even less
effective at producing airflow - partly b/c of the difficulty of maintaining a
tightly closed glottis during downward movement
of the larynx. - As a result, there is often some upward leakage
of lung air sufficient to cause involuntary
phonation (voicing) - Hausa also has bilabial and alveolar implosive
contrast with b d
Adapted from Clark, Yallop, Fletcher. 2007
24Sequence of Bilabial Implosive
25Velaric (Oral) Airflow
- Generated entirely within the oral cavity
- The back of the tongue is raised to make firm
contact with the soft palate - Air in front of this tongue closure may then be
sealed off by closing the lips or by pressing the
sides and tip of the tongue against the roof of
the mouth behind the teeth.
Adapted from Clark, Yallop, Fletcher. 2007
26Velaric (Oral) Airflow
- Both ingressive and egressive airflow are
possible using the oral air supply - Only ingressive airflow is normally used in
speech sounds - Sounds produced in this way are commonly known as
CLICKS
Adapted from Clark, Yallop, Fletcher. 2007
27Types of Clicks
- The most common type of click is made with the
lips - The action of parting the lips while lowering the
jaw will increase the oral cavity volume - Thus decreasing the pressure inside the mouth
- and air flows in
- This is similar to a light kiss
Adapted from Clark, Yallop, Fletcher. 2007
28Types of Clicks
- Another way is that the air is trapped I a small
chamber created completely by the tongue
sticking to the roof of the mouth - The tongue is then pulled away (downward)
- increasing the air chamber
- decreasing the air pressure
- and generating a short but quite strong inflow of
air as the closure is released.
Adapted from Clark, Yallop, Fletcher. 2007
29Click Articulation
- Requires complex interaction of the tongue and
surrounding muscles - you are probably familiar with the kind of click
made with the tongue tip is reasonably forward
and then pulled away - This is commonly the disapproval sound in
American English culture (tsk, tsk, tsk)
(dental)
Adapted from Clark, Yallop, Fletcher. 2007
30Click Articulation
- Requires complex interaction of the tongue and
surrounding muscles - you are probably familiar with the kind of click
made with the tongue tip is reasonably forward
and then pulled away - A second one used in Amer Eng culture (not for
speech) starting from a similar position would be
the click for calling/urging a horse or dog - Moving the sides of the tongue down rather than
the tip (Alveolar Lateral)
Adapted from Clark, Yallop, Fletcher. 2007
31Click Articulation
- Requires complex interaction of the tongue and
surrounding muscles - A third one used in Amer Eng culture (again not
for speech) has the tongue starting from a
palatal position - The tip is firmly behind the alveolar ridge and
when pulled away with a lowering jaw (and
possibly rounded lips) gives a hollow knocking
sound. - (Palatoalveolar)
Adapted from Clark, Yallop, Fletcher. 2007
32Clicks Distribution
- Click sounds are found in comparatively few Lgs.
- About 1
- Characteristic of Khoisan and Kalahari areas of
S. Africa but are also in other Bantu Languages
(such as Zulu and Xhosa) - In these languages clicks are Consonants
functioning as part of the speech system
Adapted from Clark, Yallop, Fletcher. 2007
33Clicks
Air pocket with increased volume (equals
decreased pressure) at onset and then before
release
Adapted from Clark, Yallop, Fletcher. 2007
34Click waveforms
Adapted from Clark, Yallop, Fletcher. 2007
35Articulatory sequence of an Alveolar click
36Palatograms of postalveolar and palatal Clicks
37Combination Sounds
- There is also a Combinatory Airflow Process
- The muscular systems used in the 3 airstream
mechanisms can function in partial combination - e.g. Egressive pulmonic air combined with
ingressive glottalic air resulting in phonation
while the larynx is descending for implosives - Also the egressive velaric and egressive pulmonic
airstreams can be activated simultaneously to
produce click sounds wh/ have velar nasal sounds
(like that in sing) imposed upon them.
Adapted from Clark, Yallop, Fletcher. 2007
38More practice
- How would we analyze the following?
- example 3
- example 4
Adapted from Clark, Yallop, Fletcher. 2007
39Adapted from Clark, Yallop, Fletcher. 2007
40Adapted from Clark, Yallop, Fletcher. 2007