english phonology, i bim

Post on 24-May-2015

3.941 Views

Category:

Education

9 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

DESCRIPTION

Distinguished according to phonetical and phonological points of view.

TRANSCRIPT

ESCUELA: CIENCIAS DE LA EDUCACIÓN

NOMBRES:

ENGLISH PHONOLOGYFIRST BIMESTER

FECHA:

Dra: Carmen Benítez C.

ABRIL / AGOSTO 2009

1

INTRODUCTION Purpose Definition Importance Phoneme (example) Conventions (examples) Accent Dialect

2

Received Pronunciation BBC Pronunciation Estuary English

3

THE PRODUCTION OF SPEECH SOUNDS

Articulators above the Larynx Pharynx Velum Hard palate Alveolar ridge Tongue Teeth Lips

4

Vowels:Distinguished according to

phonetical and phonological points of view.

Cardinal vowels

Classified according to Tongue position: Shape and position of the tongueThe part of the tongue raised

Lip position:

5

THE PRODUCTION OF SPEECH SOUNDS

Classification according to length Short: relativeley short in length

Long: relatively long in length

Length: physical duration of the sound

6

LONG VOWELS, DIPHTHONGS AND TRIPHTHONGS

LONG VOWELS:

Tend to be longer than short in similar contexts

Different in: Length Quality

Different according to: Context Presence or absence of stress

7

DIPHTHONGS

DEFINITION

CHARACTERISTICS

NUMBER

TYPES

Pure vowels

8

VOCING AND CONSONANTSTHE LARYNX

Functions: Permits the pass of air from

the lungs Contain the vocal folds

Anatomy:

Thyroid cartilage cricoide cartilage tracheal rings

9

VOCAL FOLDS:

What:

Two elastic bands

Where:

Inside the thyroid cartilages

Attached to arytenoid cartilague cricoid cartilage

10

GLOTTIS:What: opening betwen the vocal foldsWhere: inside the vocal foldsFunctions: produce certain types of sounds according to its state:

11

Wide apart .- Vocal folds are wide apart for normal breathing and usually during voiceless consonants like p, f, s.

Narrow glottis.- Air passes

through the glottis and the result is a

fricative sound

12

Position for vocal fold vibration.- the edges are near touching each other, air passing through the glottis will usually cause vibration.

13

Vocal folds tightly closed.- the vocal folds firmly pressed together so that air can not pass between them the resulting sound is one called a glottal stop or glottal plosive.

RESPIRATION AND VOICING

Air in the lungs is forced out, as a result: eggresisve pulmoic airstream important to produce sounds

Process for producing airstream : ribcage is lifted upwaurd and outwards

so lungs are expanded lungs take air as ribcage returns to its

position, the air expeled is used to produce sounds.

14

Air is retained as it scapes from the lungs formimg strictures

A stricture: obstruction of air, happens in the larynx if:

vocal folds are in a correct positionair is under enough pressure to be

forced out the glottis. 15

Changes in the vocal folds

Singing

Shouting

speaking quietly

read immitating characteres

16

VOICING AND PHONATIONVariations of the subglottal pressureIn Intensity: high: shouting low: speaking quitely

Frequency: high: rapid vibration of vocal cords low: slow vibration of vocal cordsQuality harsh, breathing, murmured creaky

17

CONSONANT ARTICULATION: PHASES:

1 articultator against another

2 articulators against each other

Release of air

Presure of air (plosion)

CLOSING

COMPRESION

RELEASE

POST RELEASE

18

ENGLISH PLOSIVES:p t k b d g occur initially, medially and

finally

? occurs frequently, alternative pronunciation of p t k in certain contexts

19

p b bilabial lips pressed

t d alveolar tongue against the alveolar

k g velar back of the tongue against the velum

20

p t k: voiceless

b d g: fully voiced partly voiced Voiceless

21

Environments:

Initial CV

MedialCVC

Final VC22

INITIAL POSITION (CV)

Closing phase p t k occur silently

b d g

p t k not voicing

Compresion phase very little voicing / just before r

b d g voicing if pronounced slowly

no voicing rapid speech

23

Difference: aspiration not voicing

p t k may not be preceded by s (unaspirated)

b d g can not be preceded by any other consonant

24

MEDIAL POSITION (CVCDepends on whether the preceding or following

syllables are stressed or not

Can have the sound of initial or final plosives

FINAL POSITION (CVC)

b d g little voicing beg. of compression phase

p t k voiceless

p t k release phase of both weak not

b dg audible

Difference: vowels preceding p t k are shorter than the ones preceding b d g

25

FORTIS AND LENIS

It is not accurate to call these sounds voiced.

Initially – medially scarcely voiced.

p t k produced with more force FORTIS strong

b d g produced with with less force LENIS weak

26

THE PHONEMEPhoneme: basic unit of sound, changes meaning

of words

Realization : 2 different ways of making a sound without changing its meaning, they

Occur in the same context Different realizations never occur in different

positions

Complementary Distribution: The separation of places where particular realizations can occur

Allophones: different realizations of the same phoneme.

27

SYMBOLS AND TRANSCRIPTIONS PHONEMIC SYMBOLS

Do not indicate precise phonetic value

There are many phonetic symbols according to different authors

PHONETIC SYMBOLS

Indicate precise phonetic value

TRANSCRIPTION:

PHONEMIC

PHONETIC28

TRANSCRIPTION

PHONEMIC: using phonemes / written with the appropriate symbol.

From dictation: Ss listen to a person or recording and write down what they hear

From a written text: Ss are given a passage and use phonemic symbols to represent how they think it should be pronounced by any speaker

29

PHONEMIC: Much more accurate in phonetic detail

Narrow: shows exact quality of sounds

Broad: a little more information than a phonemic one

30

Symbols differ according to writers We are not looking at all of them We are using the BBC pronunciation and

symbols (cambridge dictionary)

Reasons : Some have established a minimum set of

nonstandard symbols. Others have thought on quantity Others in quality Others in both

31

PHONOLOGY PHONETICS:

The comparative straightforward businesss of describing the sounds used in the language

PHONOLOGY:

How phonemes function in the language, the relationship among them (abstarct side of the language)

IMPORTANCE:

To acquire a full understanding of the use of sounds in the English language

32

FRICATIVES AND AFFRICATES FRICATIVES:

Definition: sounds in which air escapes through a small passage making a hissing sound, also called continuants because you can make them without any interruption (sssssss)

AFFRICATES:

Definition: sounds that begin as plosives and end as fricatives; ʧ begins in t and ends in ʃ.

The sequence kf is not considered a single sound because they need to be homorganic.

33

English Fricatives:

f θ s ʃ fortis

V ð z ʒ lenis

English Affricates

ʧ fortis shorten preceding vowel (final in the syllable

ʤ lenis

5

NASAL AND OTHER CONSONANTSDefinition: sounds in which the airflow leaves

through the nose

m n occur frequently in initial position

ŋ never in initial position, but in middle position, quite frequent

ŋk sequence pronounced as ŋ

ng sequence pronounced sometimes as ŋ, sometimes as ŋg

ŋ finger ŋg singer ŋ hang

complete morpheme part of a morpheme end of a word35

The consonant ll is a lateral consonat, the airflow leaves through the sides of the tongue.

Occurs in initial, medial and final positions

Clear l before a vowel (back of the tongue raised)

Dark l after a vowel (realized different, front of the tongue raised)

Devoiced l after p or t36

The consonant rr is an approximant, in which the tongue approaches the alveolar but never gets close enough to produce a complete consonant such as nasal or fricative

Occurs only before vowels

37

The consonants j and wApproximant sounds (semivowels)

Phonetically (way of pronouncing) are like vowels.

Phonologicaly (distribution) are like consonats.

After p, t, k they are devoiced

j palatalw bilabial

38

THE SYLLABLETwo points of view Phonetically: way of producing them, way they sound:

consist of a center with little or no obstruction and which sounds comparatively loud (vowel). Before and after the center a great deal of obstruction (consonant)

Minimum: single vowel I aɪ:Onset: consonat before vowel pear pe:Coda: vowel before consonant are a:Onset and coda consonat vowel consonant put pʊt

39

Phonolgically: possible combinations of English phonemes

Syllables start with: A vowel 1, 2 or 3 consonants More than 3 is impossible

Syllables end with A vowel 1,2,3 or 4 consonats More than 4 is impossible

THANKS

42

top related