Phonetics and Phonology
Phonetics and Phonology, Damm
Phonetics and Phonology, Damm
Fichier Détails
Cartes-fiches | 91 |
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Langue | English |
Catégorie | Anglais |
Niveau | Université |
Crée / Actualisé | 16.02.2014 / 26.02.2024 |
Lien de web |
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Exercise for vowels 1
Which of the following words contain arounded vowel?
put grey seek hook grew hoe hold
Which of the following words contain a front vowel?
see seat met tap throw tape through
Which of the following words contain a central vowel?
about put luck hit purse father kept
Which of the following words contain a high vowel?
see seat steak throw list lost through
Which of the following words contain a high back vowel?
put love hit heat luck look food –all „u“ sounds
Exercise vowels 2)
a) What do the vowels have in common?
bet hair rose post love purse mate
b) What do the vowels have in common?
see leap weird pit fiend miss crypt
2) a) -> they are all mid vowels
b) -> they are all high and front vowels
Complementary distibution
- again, as with consonants: Necessay, but not sufficient, criteria for establishing allophonic relationships
Nasalized / non nasalized vowels are in complementary distribution, but that isn't a suficient citerion.
- sufficient criteria are: frontness, length, height and roundness.
Suprasegmental ponology: why?
Phonoloy above the segment of the phoneme is useful for
- understanding some phonological processes, such as the aspiration of voicless plosives
- determing stress within a word
- describing the prosody (speech melody) of loner streches of speech
the phonetic properties of stress
characteristics of production:
Highter fundamental frequency: vocal folds vibrate more quickly ---> perception: as higher pitch
greater duration than unstressed syllables --> perception: as longe than unstressed syllables
with higher intensity --> perception: as louder than unstressed syllables
- while some words are characterized by a clearcut stressed-unstressed dichotomy,
e.g. /ˈfɑð·ər/, /əˈbɑʊt/, /ˈsɪl·ə·bəl/
(-> stress mark sign (unstressed would be unmarked))
- others have primary and secondary stress:
/ ˈreɪ-ˌdɑr/ (=radar), compare /ˈreɪdər/ (<- schwa and compeltely unstressed)
! note the diacritic signs for primary stress (upper vs lower)
Predicting stress placement in English
- The stress rules (rather: tendencies) in English can be applied to lexical classes:
Verb rule: Stress the final syllable if heavy. If the final
syllable is light stress the penultimate syllable.
examples: /oʊˈbeɪ/ (=obey), /jʊˈsɜrp/ (= to take the lead of sb.),
(-> long vowel)
/əˈtoʊn/ (=atone)
(-> short vowel with a coda)
Light syllables: short vowels no coda
Heavy syllables: all the others
- Noun rule: stress the penultimate (second last) syllable if heavy (long vowel w/ or w/out coda or short vowel with coda). If the penultimate syllable is light (short vowel only), stress the antepenultimate one. (preceding the second to last).
examples: /əˈroʊ·mə/(=aroma), /əˈdʒen·də/ (=agenda), /ˈdɪs·ə·plən/ (=disciplin)
exceptions: /spəˈge · t̬i/ -> long word
noun rule would predict stress on the initial syllable since the penultimate syllable is light
/ˈkæt.ə.mə.ræn/ (=Katamaran) noun rule would predict stress on
-> penultimate
the second syllable since the penutimate one is light
Predicting stress placement: Interface of phonology and morphology
- Suffixation, a morphological process, sometimes alters stress pattern
- Stress –attracting suffixes are -ette (diminuitive) and –ese (denoting a language or a sociolect)
e.g. /ˌkɪtʃ.ɪˈnet/ (=kitchenet), / mʌð·ər ˈiːz/ (=motherize)
-> stressed -> stressed to suffix
Stress-shifting suffixes, e.g. –ic, -ity and –al, move the stress on the base to which they attach one syllable to the right
e.g /əˈtɑm·ɪk/, /ɪˌlekˈtrɪs·ət̬·i/ (=electricity),
-> stressed – „electric“
-> first syllable stressed
/pəˈren·təl/ (=parental)
-> stressed to one syllable to the right (compare with “parent”)
- Compounds tend to be stressed on the first element
e.g. /ˈgrinˌhɑʊs/
Stress and unstress in different word categories
- Content words: words whose main function is semantic (referential to extra-linguistic reality)
(This category also includes compounds , phrasal verbs and verbs with prepositions )
-> have at least one stressed syllable
- Compounds tend to receive major stress on the first element, secondary stress on the
second one.
- Phrasal verbs: have a particle that looks like a preposition, but functions as part of the verb: turn ON, get BY, put OFF. The major stress is on the particle.
- Verbs with prepositions: e.g. believe in, listen to
--> stress is never on the preposition: beLIEVE in, LISten to
- Function words: words whose main function is grammatical
--> are unstressed
Exception: auxiliary verbs at the end of a sentence
or when used in question tags:
You DID‘nt just say what I thought I heard, DID you?
Yes, I DID.
Define“ foot“ (stress)
``Foot`` = next phonological unit above the syllable
Please complete:
In stress-timed languages...
....a stressed syllable has to occur at a given intervall
(in english: 6 seconds)
When does [k] occur?
[k] occurs before back vowels, cupboard
When does [c] occur?
[c] occurs before front vowels, kitchen
In English, upper case occurs...
sentence- initially and with proper names
The phonetic properties of stress (Tabelle)
characteristics of production
perception
Higher fundamental frequency: vocal folds vibrate more quickly
as higher pitch
greater duration than unstressed syllables
As longer than unstressed syllables
With higher intensity
as louder than unstressed syllables
describe "schwa"
typically in unstressed syllables
"umgedrehtes e" als phonetic symbol
mid-central vowel
about, mother, sofa
Stress, rhythm and intonation are objects of research in...
Phonology
Phonetic branches are...
acoustic, auditory and articulatory
acoustic phonetics is concerned with
physics of speech
auditory phonetics is concerned with...
neurology
articulatory phonetics is concerned with...
anatomy and physiology/ production
The IPA
The IPA has one symbol for each sound
Different languages have different phoneme inventories, e.g. clicking sounds in African languages or Umlaute in German.
A phone is an allophone of another phone if...
they are in complementary constitution
no change in meaning occurs when you substitute one for another --> only odd pronounciation
When acquiring a new language....
a new phoneme is easier to learn than a new distributional rule/ an new phoneme contrast
Properties for classifying consonants
1) (origin and) direction of airstream --> initiated by the lungs (all consonants)
outwards: egressive, used for production of consonants
inwards: ingressive, used for voice disguise in some languages
2) Vocal fold action: opening and closing: voiced
remain apart: voiceless
3) escape of airstream : oral vs. nasal
4) manner of articulation
Escape of airstream, oral vs. nasal
oral: when velum is raised, it blocks access to the nose, making airstream escape through mouth
nasal: when velum is lowered, air escapes through nose
Manner of articulation is...
defined by the relation between the active and passive articulator
stops (manner)
complete blockage of airflow followed by sudden release
all English stops with phoneme status are plosives
plosive (manner)
stops produced on an outward-bound airstream
/p/ /b/ /k/ /t/ /g/ /d/
fricatives (manner)
articulators approaching closely but no complete blockage of airstream
airstream is forced through narrow gap, causing friction
/f/ /s/ /sch/ --> hissing sound
/v/ /z/ /ch/ --> buzzing sound
affricates (manner)
start out as stops and evolve as fricatives
/tsch/ chin /dsch/ gin
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