Phonology IIChapter 5
Phonology IIChapter 5
Phonology IIChapter 5
Articulation
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Describes how the airstream is modified by the vocal
tract to produce sounds:
• Stops
• Fricatives
• Affricates
• Liquids
• Glides
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Stops: sounds produced by obstructing the airstream
in the oral cavity and then releasing it.
English sounds:
Bilabial stops: [p] [b] as in “pot” and
“bee” Alveolar stops: [t] [d] as in “two”
and “do” Velar stops: [k] [g] as in
“car” and “go”
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Fricatives: sounds made by forming a nearly
complete stoppage of the airstream.
English sounds:
Labio-dental: [f] and [v] as in “fun” and “vote”
Alveolar: [s] and [z] as in “so” and “zoo”
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A graphic way of
looking at English
fricatives.
PLACE OF ARTICULATION:
a) inter-dental b) labiodental
c) alveolar d) palatal
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Affricates: sounds made by a combination of the stop
and fricative. The airstream is briefly
stopped, and then the articulators are
released slightly.
This action causes a kind of friction, and produces the
alveolar (or alveo-palatal) sounds.
English sounds:
[tƒ] as in “watch” and [dʒ] as in “joy”
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Liquids: sounds produced in the oral cavity with
some obstruction of air stream in the mouth, but
there is no friction in the production of these sounds.
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Glides: sounds produced with little obstruction of the airstream.
Glides are also known as semivowels.
If the vocal tract were any more open these would be
classified as vowels.
These sounds must be preceded or followed by a vowel.
In English the two glides are:
o[y] as in yet
o[w] as in wet
Even though they are vowel-like in their articulation, the
sounds are consonants since they cannot function as the
nucleus of a syllable.
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English Alphabet versus International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA)
The English alphabet has 26 letters, but not a one-on-one correspondence.
Example: [k] sound can be represented as c in “cow”, k in “kite”, ch in “chorus”.
Voiceless
The space between the cords when they are open is
known as the glottis.
The vocal cords can be relaxed so that the flow of air coming up
from the lungs passes through freely (voiceless); or the vocal
cords can be held close together so that they vibrate as air passes
through (voiced).
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Partially open cords Opened cords
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Practice voiced vs.
voiceless sounds
Notice how the voicing occurs with those words that are
produced in the glottis. The front sounds are voiceless.
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Vowels: Sounds that are produced without
any obstruction in the oral cavity.
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Four Qualities that Describe Vowels:
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The two other qualities that describe vowels:
4) Tenseness:
a. tense (long): produced with an extra degree
of muscular effort
b. lax (short): less tense
ex: beat/bit, bait/bet, boot/put, boat/bore
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The Vowel Chart Classification of
English Vowels
Source: http://www.uoregon.edu/~l150web/vowel.html
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Other Features of Vowels
Nasalized Vowels
when the vowel sounds are emitted through
the nasal track because of proximity to a nasal
sound: bean, bin, bane, Ben, ban. Boon, bun,
bone, beam, bam, boom, bing.
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Long(tense)/Short(lax) Vowels
Another way to describe vowels is by the amount of
tension experienced by the tongue.
Long (tense) Short (lax)
[i:] beat [ı] bit
[ei] bait [e] bet
[u:] boot [u] put
[ou] boat [כ:] ball, bore
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Dipthongs …
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Our Phonological knowledge comprises of:
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How do we describe sounds?
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Phonemes Allophones
When different phones are derived (variants) from one phoneme (because of the
rules that govern the pronunciation of the phones), these phones are called
allophones of that phoneme.
[p] /p/ and /ph/ {aspiration rule}
[i] /i/ and / /ȉ {nasalization rule}
[l] /l/, / ŀ/ or /ł/ [voiceless rule and velarization rule}
Allophones are always in complementary distribution since one
variation cannot occur in the same environment as the other
variant. 27
Knowing the phonemes of the language (English) is knowing
the distinctive sounds of the language (English) and how they
are pronounced.
The initial sounds in the minimal pairs that have distinctively different
properties are called phonemes.
Substitution of the initial distinctive sound produces a new word. Thus the
words are said to be in contrast.
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When two words are similar in every way, except that a
substitution in a sound in the same place causes a new word to
be born, we have what is known as a Minimal Pair.
sip/zip; fine/vine; chunk/junk are minimal pairs.
Minimal Pairs are used to contrast or highlight the phonemes of
a particular language.
bead [bid] and deed [did]]
bowl [bol] and dole [dol]
[b] and [d] can contrast in the same position in words where
all other sounds are the same.
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Why should you know about phonemes and minimal pairs?
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Phonological Rules that Govern the
Pronunciation of Sounds in
English
Aspiration
Velarization
Nasalization
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Phonological Rule: Aspiration
Set A: pat /pæt/ tub /tʌb/ cope /kowp/
Set span /spæn/ upset / ʌpsɛt/ sap /sæp/
B:
In Set A: [p] is aspirated, that is an extra puff of air accompanies the sound. The
features of the [p] sound are characterized:
(1) they are all stops, (2)they are all voiceless, and (3) they all occur in initial position, and
before a stressed vowel.
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Phonological Rule: Velarization
Example phoneme is [l]:
It can be realized in our pronunciation in 3 different ways:
1st in words like: blue [blu] glue [glu] gleam [glim] as here
/l/ is voiced since it is preceded by a voiced stop [b],[d],[g]
2nd in words like: clip /kŀ p/ plow /pŀ aw/ as here /l/ is voiceless
since it is preceded by voiceless stops.
3rd in words like: foal /foł/ peel /pił/ teal /tił/ as here [l] is velarized
since it is preceded by a stressed vowel and is at the end of the word.
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Phonological Rule: Nasalization
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Phonological Rules: Past Tense Pronunciation Rule
ɪd /
/græbd/ /riypt / /steytɪd / 35
What rules govern the pronunciation of these past tense
phonemes?
Set A: when the final phoneme is voiced, pronounce the past
tense with /d/ when the final phoneme is a vowel,
nasal, glide, liquid, pronounce the past tense with /d/;
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Phonological Rules: Pronouncing Plurals
Let's look at a few pluralized words
Set A: cat - cats; mat - mats
Set B: dog - dogs; bud - buds
Set C: bus - buses; church - churches
How do we pronounce these?
Set A: pronounce with /s/ Set B:
pronounce with /z/ Set C:
pronounce with /әz/
What are the rules?
Set A: when the final phoneme is voiceless, pronounce the plural with /s/
Set B: when the final phoneme is voiced, pronounce the plural with /z/
Set C: when the final phoneme is an alveolar sounds, pronounce the plural with
an /ә/ before the /z/
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What do we see happening as a result of these phonological
processes?
Feature-changing processes
changes a sound's feature due to the influence of a nearby
segment i.e., Nasalization rule
Feature Adding/Deleting Processes
addition: adds a new feature, i.e., Aspiration rule
deletion: occurs in fast speech or casual speech in English
mystery ----mystry; general ---genral; I
will --I'll
Feature Movement Processes
Children’s speech: animal-aminal; sphagetti-pesketti
Dialect:s: ask is pronounced as [æ ks], but asking
remains unchanged
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Pronunciation Problems for ELs
• Lack of sound in native system;
• Allophone in native language is a phoneme in target
language;
• Phonemes with different distribution in two languages, i.e.,
in English -ng [ŋ] is either words final (dancing) or internal
(mango), but never in word initial, which may be true in ELs’
L1;
• Phonemes occur in unfamiliar combinations;
• Native and target languages have similar phonemes in
different points of articulation (factor contributing to accent).
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