Phonetics and Phonology

Phonetics and Phonology, Damm

Phonetics and Phonology, Damm

Lena Heupel

Lena Heupel

Kartei Details

Karten 91
Sprache English
Kategorie Englisch
Stufe Universität
Erstellt / Aktualisiert 16.02.2014 / 26.02.2024
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Sociolect

Mode of speech particular to a given group

gender, age, grammaer, lexicon

regional varieties

features shared by people from a larger area

Sytemic differences

difference in number of phonemes

vowel inventories of each variety are larger

BE- non-rhotic

AE- rhotic

rhotic- realization of r

syllable

mandatory syllable constituent in English is the head (nucleus)

the head of a syllable typically is a vowel in English

sonorant consonants /l/ /m/ /n/ /r/ can also be heads

optional constituents of a syllable are onset and coda

Phonetic stress…

•is not an absolute category, but a relative one: syllables are perceived as stressed or unstresed in comparison to other syllables within the same word or string of words   •is the combined effect of a number of articulatory features, each one having an effect on perception

 

•How does low stress effect vowel quality?

It reduces full vowels to schwa

  „schwa“= - represented in German as „Stummes –e“

             - reduced vowel

fixed stress languages

•stress falls on one particular syllable, with the exception of

    Long words (example: gealic word for potato)

free stress languages

impossible to predict stress placement

here, the stress pattern has to be learned for each individual word

•a change in stress can efect a difference in meaning,  e.g. Russian ‘muka ‘torment vs. mu‘ka (flour)

Light syllables

short vowels no coda

Heavy syllables

all the others

composed of either a long vowel or diphtong, with or without coda, or a short vowel with coda.

Stress –attracting suffixes

-ette

kitchenette

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

electricity comapred to electric, parental compared to parent

syllable-timed language

•e,g. French

    timing is based on the syllable per se: an equal amount of time is devoted to each (MacMahon  2010: 214)

stress-timed language

•e.g. English:

    timing is allocated on the basis of the distribution of stressed syllables

A foot is...

the smallest phonological  unit containing an element that receives stress.  A

foot minimally consist in one syllable (cf. second line), but can also consist in a

word with a stressed and an unstressed syllable (RAI-der) or a larger phrase

occuring between short pauses that has one stressed syllable and one or more

unstressed ones (the CAT; is IN-ter-es-ted).

Content words

words whose main function is semantic (referential to extra-linguistic reality)

have at least one stressed syllable

nouns, verbs, adjectives, possesive pronouns, adverbs, auxiliary verbs contracted with not, interrogatives(where,when)

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

stress is never on the preposition

   believe in, listen to

Function words

are unstressed

articvles, prepositions, personal pronouns, possesive adjectives(my, your, her), demonstratives(this,that), relative pronouns, conjunctions

Theirs and ours (exam question)

are both content words and thus stressed

... is about the physics of speech, i.e. its transmission as manifested in sound waves

acoustic phonetics

Articulator approach closely, but not closely enough for complete bkockage of the airstream. Describes which group of phonemes

fricatives

The restriction on the position within a word that a phoneme can occupy is called...

defective distribution

•The tense/ lax distinction, describing the effort involved in the articulation of the vowel, goes along with the dimension of vowel…

length

the phenomenon of a particular (derivational) suffix requiring a vowel change in the base of the wird is referred to as...

morphological conditioning

The classification of a variety of English as "rhotic" means that...

the variety of English is AE. Standard AE is rhotic because "r" is pronounced in all environments.

the head of a syllable is called the ... and typically is a ....

nucleus/vowel

What is phonetics?

The study of the production, physical manifestation and perceiption of sounds

What is phonology?

The study of structural disrtribution of sounds within a given linguistic system:

- which sounds are part of the inventory of a language? (ex: sounds that English has but German doesn't)

- whicih sound sequences are possible within a language? (comp. German and English again)

- what are typical features of stress, rhythm and intonation of a language?

When is a phone a phoneme?

 

If the replacement results in a change of meaning, the [sound] is classified as a /phoneme/ --> the smallest meaning-differentiating unit within a language.

Arbitrary

The relationship between a symbol and a sound or concept it stands for.

Like "the letter a", a phoneme is an abstraction realised in many different forms.

Contrastive phonology and second language acquisition

When acquiring a second language, a new phoneme is easier to learn than a new distribution rule / a new phoneme contrast.

Why?

Easier to fill a previously unoccupied gap in a system that it is to re-arange a system (cognetivly in general terms)

- difficult to hear a difference that does not have a meaning-differentiatting function in one's NL (and therfore ignored on a daily basis)

Manner of articulation

 

defined by te relation between the respective movable speech organs, also called active articulator, and the immovable speech organ, called passive articulator.

1. stops (plosives) : complete blockage of airflow followed by sudden release --> /p/ /t/, /k/   /b/,/d/, /g/

2. fricatives: airstream is forced through a narrow gap, causing friction --> /f/, /s/ /ʃ/, /v/, /z/ /ʒ/

3. affricates: subclass of fricatives, start out as stops and "envolve" into fricatives --> /tʃ/ in chin, /dʒ/ in gin

4. approximants: articulators don't approach closely enough to produce audible friction. Quality of the respective sounds is produced as a result of the way the shape of the oral cavity is altered. --> /j/ in yes, /w/ in wet, /r/ in red, /l/ in let

 

places of articulation

bilibial - /p/; /b/; /m/; /w/ -> "wet" (using both lips)

labioldental - /v/ -> "vison" /f/ (upper teeth touches lower lips)

dental - /θ/ -> "think' /ð/ -> "that" (tongue touches teeth)

alveolar - / n/; /l/; /d/; /t/; /s/; /z/ (tongue touches alveloar ridge)

post-alveolar - /r/ -> "ring' (tounge is right behind the alveolar ridge)

palato-alveolar - /ʃ/; /tʃ/; /ʒ/; /dʒ/ (tongue is between alveolar ridge and hard palate)

palatal - /j/ ->"yes" (tounge touches hard palate)

velar - /g/; /k/; /ŋ/ -> "ring" (back of tongue touches soft palate)

glottal -  /h/ -> glottal fricative; /?/ -> glottal stop

Archiphoneme

A unit in a neutralized position

The label is the capital letter variant of the phoneme that is on the now neutralized feature when the vaiants are not neutralized /T/ [+oral, +stop, +aveolar, 0 voice]

It lists all the feature that the neutralized set of phonemes have in common as + and the ones that have been neutralized as 0.

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