PHONETICS AND PHONOLOGY
Sound is both a
physical and a mental phenomenon.
PHONETICS is a
technically based subject concerned with measuring sound, recording frequencies
and studying the physiology of speech.
PHONOLOGY is
essentially preoccupied with sound as a system for carrying meaning and its
task is identifying phonemes.
PHONETICS has 3 main
dimensions:
(a) Acoustic phonetics (production of sound)
(b) Articulatory phonetics (transmission of sound)
(c) Auditory phonetics (reception of sound)
(a) studies the
properties of sound as a consequence of variations in air pressure. Frequencies
of speech are recorded by a spectrograph
to produce spectrograms.
(b) studies the
processes by which we articulate speech sounds and describes them in terms of the
organs involved in their production: tongue, teeth, lips, lungs etc. (Place of
articulation, manner of articulation, voice)
(c) is concerned
with the perception of speech sounds.
ARTICULATORY PHONETICS : PLACE OF ARTICULATION
Place of articulation is the point
in the vocal tract where the speech organs restrict the passage of air
producing distinctive sounds and is particularly important for the production
of consonants. Consonant sounds are
referred to by their place of articulation:
Bilabial / b /p /m /w
Labio-dental / f / v (bottom lip
touching the upper teeth)
Dental /
θ
/ ð (tongue touching the
upper teeth)
Alveolar / t /d /s /z
/l /n/ (tongue touching the alveolar
ridge behind the upper
teeth)
Post-alveolar / r / (tongue curled behind the alveolar
ridge)
Palato-alveolar /dʒ / tʃ/ (tongue touching
both the hard palate and the alveolar
ridge)
Palatal / ʃ / ʒ / j (middle of the
tongue against the hard palate)
Velar / k / g
/ ŋ (back of the tongue against the soft palate or velum)
Glottal / h / (formed in
the space between the vocal folds or glottis)
In vowels air is
manipulated by the shape of the oral cavity and the position of the speech
organs. Thus you can have:
Frontal vowels : / i (need) / I
(name) / ɛ (bed) / æ (cat)/ (front of the tongue + palate)
Middle vowels : / ʌ (cup) / ɜ (bird) / ə (mother)/ (middle of the tongue + palate)
Back vowels: / a(car) / ɒ(not) / ɔ (ball) / ʊ (book) / ʊ (blue) / (back of the tongue + palate)
ARTICULATORY PHONETICS : MANNER OF ARTICULATION
Configuration adopted by the speech organs in articulating a sound.
Plosives (stops) : / p / b / t / d/ k / g / (airstream is stopped by a brief closure)
Fricatives : / f /
v/ θ / ð /s / z / ʃ / ʒ / h / (friction occurs as air passes
through)
Affricates : /dʒ / tʃ/ (airstream is stopped as for a plosive and then
released
slowly with
friction)
Nasals : / m / n / ŋ/
(airstream is diverted through the nasal cavity by
lowering the
soft palate)
Liquids : / l / r /
Glides : / w / j /
ARTICULATORY PHONETICS : VOICE
Voicing occurs when the vocal folds
or chords situated in the larynx
vibrate.
Voiced sounds : ex. / b / z / v
/
Voiceless sounds: ex. / p / s /
f /
AUDITORY PHONETICS
This discipline studies the physical ways in which the sound waves we
produce are converted into meaningful units of speech.
The outer ear collects the
sounds, the middle ear amplifies
them, and the inner ear transmits
them through the auditory nerve to
the speech centres of the brain, the most important of which are Wernickes’s
area and Broca’s area, both located in the left emisphere in right-handed
people.
There are various theories on how the brain reconstructs a word from a
series of coarticulated sounds and speculations on the uniqueness and
innateness of language.
PHONOLOGY
Phonology studies the systematic relationships between sounds within
the grammar of a language.
A phoneme is an abstract
unit of sound which forms part of the mental apparatus of all the native users
of a language.
Some prefer to see these relationships just in terms of distinctive
features (for example “voiced bilabial plosive”
for a /b/) according to the
theory elaborated by Roman Jakobson. Distinctive features are binary and can have only two values ‘ +
’ or ‘ – ’.
Classificatory
features:
Consonantal (plosives,
fricatives, affricates, nasals and liquids as opposed to vowels and glides)
Vocalic (vowels and
liquids)
Syllabic (sounds which can
function as the peak of a syllable, ex. vowels)
Obstruent ( sounds that
involve radical obstruction of the airstream like plosives, fricatives and
affricates as opposed to liquids, glides, nasals and vowels)
Nasal
Articulatory
features:
High (tongue above the rest position)
Low (tongue below the rest position)
Back (tongue retracted from the rest position)
Round (lips rounded)
Anterior (post-alveolar
obstructon: labials, labio-dentals and alveolars)
Coronal (blade of the tongue raised from the neutral
position: dentals, alveolars, post-alveolars and palatals)
Lateral (air escapes over the sides of the tongue /
l / )
Manner features:
Continuant (fricatives,
approximants [liquides and glides] and
vowels as opposed to plosives and affricates)
Delayed release
(affricates /dʒ / tʃ/)
Acoustic features:
Voice
Strident (high-frequency sounds, ex. labio-dental,
alveolar and palato-alveolar)
PHONOLOGY studies also the
patterns of stress we use in speaking
and the variations of pitch or tone.
The study of this is
called Prosody and examines units
larger than the phoneme, termed suprasegmentals,
which become very important for Discourse
analysis and Pragmatics.
(Intonation)
Phonological rules
are also important for the study of Syntax
and in particolar of Morphology.
Morphological
alterations have also a phonological side because they often involve
pronunciation changes. Ex. Plural ‘s’ after belt,
lane, beach ( / s / z / iz );
‘-ed ’ after stop, clean, want ( / t
/ d / id).
The study of this is
called Morphophonology.
INTONATION
Term referred to the
variations in the pitch of a
speaker’s voice.
Tone
is the way in which pitch is used in language.
There are tone languages but
in English, like in Italian, tone has only a suprasegmental function. It contributes to determining meaning.
A tone unit is conventionally said to have the following
structure:
(pre-head) – (head) – tonic/nuclear syllable – (tail)
Example:
There’s no need to be so upSET about it
There’s (pre-head)
No need
to be so (head)
upSET (tonic
syllable)
about it (tail)
MOST COMMON TONES
- Fall
- Rise-fall
- Fall-rise
- Rise
- Level
- Falling is usually considered assertive, positive: That’s MINE
- Rising is polite, diffident, enquiring: COFFee?
- Falling-rising expresses doubt, uncertainty: I’m not SURE.
- Rising-falling is emphatic: How NICE!
- Level is neutral: I don’t MIND.
Intonation is also
linked to grammatical functions, for example to distinguish yes/no questions
from wh- questions.
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