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Phonetics & Phonology of
          English:
How & Why We Speak the Way
           We Do

           Dr. Latricia Trites
          Academic Advisor
   Fulbright Yilan Project 2008-2009
What is Phonetics?
• Phonetics is the study of speech sounds.
  – Articulatory phonetics – how speech sounds are
    produced
  – Acoustic phonetics – the transmission and
    physical properties of speech sounds
  – Auditory phonetics – perception of speech
    sounds
• Phonetic transcriptions – one sound = one
  symbol.
Consonants
• The descriptions of the sounds we call consonants
  are based on the human articulatory system (lungs
  to pump air in and out, vocal folds, oral cavity
  including tongue and lips, and nasal cavity).
• Consonants are described using 3 characteristics:
   – vocal quality (voiced/voiceless)
   – point of articulation
   – manner of articulation
The Articulators
Places of articulation (for consonants)
Consonant Chart
            Bilabial   Labiodent Interdent   Alveolar   Palatal   Velar   Glottal
                           al    al
  Stop      p     b                          t    d               k   g   hʔ


Fricative               f    v     θ    ð    s    z     ʃ    ʒ


Affricate                                               ʧ    ʤ


 Nasal           m                                n                   ŋ


 Liquid                                            l


Retroflex                                          r
 liquid
 Glide      ʍ    w                                           y
Vowels
• Place of articulation, manner of articulation and
  voicing are not useful when trying to describe
  vowels.
• Vowels are all made in the mouth (place), with
  little or no air flow constriction (manner) and are
  always voiced in English
• So the system that describes vowels does so in
  terms 4 characteristics:
   –   tongue placement
   –   tongue height
   –   lip rounding
   –   tenseness.
Vowel Chart

               Front            Center       Back

       i                                            u

High           ɪ                              ʊ


           e                                        o
                                  ə ʌ
                                              ɪ
Mid                    ɛ



Low
                           æ                        a
                                         ɪ
Diphthongs
Major
• /aɪ/
• /ɔɪ/
• /aʊ/
Minor (if at all)
• /eɪ/
• /oʊ/
Suprasegmentals! What are those?
• Length
   –   High vowels shorter than low vowels
   –   Voiceless consonants longer than voiced consonants
   –   Voiceless fricatives longest
   –   Length is influenced by the surrounding sounds
• Tone
   – Can change meaning in some languages (like Chinese)
• Stress
   –   Stressed syllables more prominent than unstressed ones
   –   Stressed syllables usually contain tense vowels
   –   Stressed syllables are often longer
   –   Unstressed syllables reduce vowel
• Intonation
   – Rising and falling intonation can change meaning
What is Phonology?
• Phonology is how speech sounds are organized
  and affect one another in pronunciation.
• Key terms:
   – Phone – sound that is actually heard [ ]
   – Phoneme – more theoretical (idea) of a sound / /
   – Allophone – nondistinctive realization of the same
     phoneme
• This organization is explained in phonological
  rules
Different Types of Phonological
                    Variation
     • Overlapping Distribution – different sound in
       same environment (ex. /thap/ vs. /phat/).
     • Contrastive distribution – changing sound
       changes meaning (ex. /mæn/ vs./mɪn/).
     • Complementary distribution – sounds in a
       language never found in the same phonetic
       environment (ex. /thap/ vs. /path/*).
     • Free variation – two sounds that occur in
       overlapping environments but doesn’t change
       meaning (ex. /ɪnpʊt/ vs. / ɪmpʊt /).
*Italics indicates sound variant that cannot occur in the English language
Common Phonemic Rules
• Aspiration [h]
• Unreleased Stop [ ̚ ]
• Flap [ɾ]
• Dental Consonants [⊓]
• Velarization [ɫ]
• Voicelessness [˚]
• Vowel lengthening [‫]׃‬
• Vowel nasalization [~]
Phonemic Rules
• Aspiration Rule: Voiceless stops are aspirated at
  the beginning of a stressed syllable.
• Liquid/Glide Devoicing: Liquids/Glides become
  voiceless when they follow a voiceless stop,
  fricative, or affricate.
• Vowel Lengthening: Vowels are lengthened when
  they come before a voiced consonant.
• Flapping: When a /t/ or /d/ is preceded by a vowel
  and followed by a vowel, it becomes flapped (ex.
  bitter, butter, batter, ladder, letter, beauty,
  beautiful).
Common Phonological Rules
• Assimilation – becomes like the neighboring
  sound (ex. hippo)
   – Palatization (ex. Don’t you, Won’t you)
   – r coloring (ex. fur, bird, party) often seen as /ɚ/or/ɝ/
   – Nasal coloring
• Dissimilation (ex. fifth, sixth)
• Insertion (ex. dance, strength, hamster)
• Deletion (ex. chocolate, interesting)
Important Information to Remember
1. There are EXCEPTIONS to every rule in
   English.
2. English speakers, like all other languages
   try to say things as quickly and easily as
   possible.
3. Every region and dialect will have
   variations in speech patterns; however, it
   is important to foster correct
   pronunciation instead of bad habits.
Tips
• Be consistent with one symbol = one sound.
• Remember that “bo po mo fo” is used to teach
  Mandarin, not English, because the language is
  built on syllables, English is a sound/symbol
  language, not built on syllables.
• Help students understand how sounds are made.
• Help students learn to sound out words instead of
  just listen and repeat.
• Be aware of common mistakes based on first
  language that students tend to make: dropping
  final consonants, confusing /l/ and /r/, inserting /ə/,
  pronouncing all vowels as tense vowels.
• Remember that there are useful websites where
  you can find correct pronunciation of English
  words.
Teaching Phonics
• How can we use this phonetic information
  and the phonological rules to teach phonics
  better?
• Using your regular textbook, take 10 - 15
  minutes to design a phonics activity that
  incorporates some of the information
  learned today.
Resources
Bergmann, A., Hall, K.C., & Ross, S. H. (Eds.). (2007).
   Language files: Materials for an introduction to language
   & linguistics (10th ed.). Columbus, OH: Ohio State
   University Press.
Celce-Murcia, M., Brinton, D., & Goodwin, J. (1996).
   Teaching pronunciation: A reference for teachers of
   English to speakers of other languages. Cambridge:
   Cambridge University Press.
International Phonetic Association http://
   www.langsci.ucl.ac.uk/ipa/
Merriam-Webster Dictionary
   http://www.merriam-webster.com
Phthong!
   http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~rogers/phthong.228/phthong228.ht

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Slideshare

  • 1. Phonetics & Phonology of English: How & Why We Speak the Way We Do Dr. Latricia Trites Academic Advisor Fulbright Yilan Project 2008-2009
  • 2. What is Phonetics? • Phonetics is the study of speech sounds. – Articulatory phonetics – how speech sounds are produced – Acoustic phonetics – the transmission and physical properties of speech sounds – Auditory phonetics – perception of speech sounds • Phonetic transcriptions – one sound = one symbol.
  • 3. Consonants • The descriptions of the sounds we call consonants are based on the human articulatory system (lungs to pump air in and out, vocal folds, oral cavity including tongue and lips, and nasal cavity). • Consonants are described using 3 characteristics: – vocal quality (voiced/voiceless) – point of articulation – manner of articulation
  • 5. Places of articulation (for consonants)
  • 6. Consonant Chart Bilabial Labiodent Interdent Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal al al Stop p b t d k g hʔ Fricative f v θ ð s z ʃ ʒ Affricate ʧ ʤ Nasal m n ŋ Liquid l Retroflex r liquid Glide ʍ w y
  • 7. Vowels • Place of articulation, manner of articulation and voicing are not useful when trying to describe vowels. • Vowels are all made in the mouth (place), with little or no air flow constriction (manner) and are always voiced in English • So the system that describes vowels does so in terms 4 characteristics: – tongue placement – tongue height – lip rounding – tenseness.
  • 8. Vowel Chart Front Center Back i u High ɪ ʊ e o ə ʌ ɪ Mid ɛ Low æ a ɪ
  • 9. Diphthongs Major • /aɪ/ • /ɔɪ/ • /aʊ/ Minor (if at all) • /eɪ/ • /oʊ/
  • 10. Suprasegmentals! What are those? • Length – High vowels shorter than low vowels – Voiceless consonants longer than voiced consonants – Voiceless fricatives longest – Length is influenced by the surrounding sounds • Tone – Can change meaning in some languages (like Chinese) • Stress – Stressed syllables more prominent than unstressed ones – Stressed syllables usually contain tense vowels – Stressed syllables are often longer – Unstressed syllables reduce vowel • Intonation – Rising and falling intonation can change meaning
  • 11. What is Phonology? • Phonology is how speech sounds are organized and affect one another in pronunciation. • Key terms: – Phone – sound that is actually heard [ ] – Phoneme – more theoretical (idea) of a sound / / – Allophone – nondistinctive realization of the same phoneme • This organization is explained in phonological rules
  • 12. Different Types of Phonological Variation • Overlapping Distribution – different sound in same environment (ex. /thap/ vs. /phat/). • Contrastive distribution – changing sound changes meaning (ex. /mæn/ vs./mɪn/). • Complementary distribution – sounds in a language never found in the same phonetic environment (ex. /thap/ vs. /path/*). • Free variation – two sounds that occur in overlapping environments but doesn’t change meaning (ex. /ɪnpʊt/ vs. / ɪmpʊt /). *Italics indicates sound variant that cannot occur in the English language
  • 13. Common Phonemic Rules • Aspiration [h] • Unreleased Stop [ ̚ ] • Flap [ɾ] • Dental Consonants [⊓] • Velarization [ɫ] • Voicelessness [˚] • Vowel lengthening [‫]׃‬ • Vowel nasalization [~]
  • 14. Phonemic Rules • Aspiration Rule: Voiceless stops are aspirated at the beginning of a stressed syllable. • Liquid/Glide Devoicing: Liquids/Glides become voiceless when they follow a voiceless stop, fricative, or affricate. • Vowel Lengthening: Vowels are lengthened when they come before a voiced consonant. • Flapping: When a /t/ or /d/ is preceded by a vowel and followed by a vowel, it becomes flapped (ex. bitter, butter, batter, ladder, letter, beauty, beautiful).
  • 15. Common Phonological Rules • Assimilation – becomes like the neighboring sound (ex. hippo) – Palatization (ex. Don’t you, Won’t you) – r coloring (ex. fur, bird, party) often seen as /ɚ/or/ɝ/ – Nasal coloring • Dissimilation (ex. fifth, sixth) • Insertion (ex. dance, strength, hamster) • Deletion (ex. chocolate, interesting)
  • 16. Important Information to Remember 1. There are EXCEPTIONS to every rule in English. 2. English speakers, like all other languages try to say things as quickly and easily as possible. 3. Every region and dialect will have variations in speech patterns; however, it is important to foster correct pronunciation instead of bad habits.
  • 17. Tips • Be consistent with one symbol = one sound. • Remember that “bo po mo fo” is used to teach Mandarin, not English, because the language is built on syllables, English is a sound/symbol language, not built on syllables. • Help students understand how sounds are made. • Help students learn to sound out words instead of just listen and repeat. • Be aware of common mistakes based on first language that students tend to make: dropping final consonants, confusing /l/ and /r/, inserting /ə/, pronouncing all vowels as tense vowels. • Remember that there are useful websites where you can find correct pronunciation of English words.
  • 18. Teaching Phonics • How can we use this phonetic information and the phonological rules to teach phonics better? • Using your regular textbook, take 10 - 15 minutes to design a phonics activity that incorporates some of the information learned today.
  • 19. Resources Bergmann, A., Hall, K.C., & Ross, S. H. (Eds.). (2007). Language files: Materials for an introduction to language & linguistics (10th ed.). Columbus, OH: Ohio State University Press. Celce-Murcia, M., Brinton, D., & Goodwin, J. (1996). Teaching pronunciation: A reference for teachers of English to speakers of other languages. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. International Phonetic Association http:// www.langsci.ucl.ac.uk/ipa/ Merriam-Webster Dictionary http://www.merriam-webster.com Phthong! http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~rogers/phthong.228/phthong228.ht