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Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants

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Page 1: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

Consonants and vowels

1: Consonants

Page 2: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

Consonants and vowels

1: Consonants

Phonetics and phonology

Page 3: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

Places of articulation

Subclasses: bilabial/labiodental, etc. (see below)

Page 4: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

Places of articulation

Subclasses: bilabial/labiodental, etc. (see below)

Page 5: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal
Page 6: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

Places of articulation

:-)))

Page 7: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

+ continuant/noncontinuant, lateral, etc.

Manner of articulation

Page 8: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

Manner of articulation

the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal tract (that is, the smaller the degree of obstruction), the more sonorous the sound is.

Page 9: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

Voicing

Page 10: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

The three-term description of consonants:- place of articulation;- manner of articulation;- voicing.

Page 11: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

(shaded cells: sibilants)

Page 12: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

(all voiced)

Page 13: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

The phonology of English consonants: R-dropping

Page 14: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

The phonology of English consonants: R-dropping

new homophones:sore – saw, pour – paw, aren't – aunt, farther – father, fort – fought, source – sauce, more – maw, tuner – tuna, sort – sought, court – caught, spar – spa, career – Korea

Page 15: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal
Page 16: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal
Page 17: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal
Page 18: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

Dropping of a consonant word-finally and pre-consonantally

Page 19: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

Dropping of a consonant word-finally and pre-consonantally

Page 20: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

Dropping of a consonant word-finally and pre-consonantally

Page 21: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

Dropping of a consonant word-finally and pre-consonantally

Page 22: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

The phonology of English consonants: R-dropping

Linking-R:more exciting, your eyes, (to) err is (human), care about, centre of, tire us, etc.between two sentences: e.g., He doesn't care. I do or There'sa spider. I'm scared.

Intrusive-R:visa application, (the) idea is, (the) Shah of (Persia), schwa insertion, law and (order), Gloria Estefan, (cats) claw at (the furniture), (the giant) panda is (an endangered species), etc.between two sentences: Try that sofa. It's softer or Call Maria. I need her.

Further homophones: e.g., vanilla ice – vanilla rice, Amanda Avon – Amanda Raven, the spa is broken – the spar is broken, put the tuna in the box – put the tuner in the box

Page 23: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

saw us

Page 24: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal
Page 25: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal
Page 26: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

The phonology of English consonants: R-droppingRhotic and non-rhotic accents of English:

Page 27: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

The phonology of English consonants: R-droppingRhotic and non-rhotic accents of English:

Page 28: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

The phonology of English consonants: L-darkening in RP

Within and across sentences: the pronunciation of word-final /l/ is determined by the following segment:

dark in feel and feel me clear in feel at home dark in spell and spell this word clear in spell it

cf. kill / kill Bill vs. kill you, smile / smile back vs. smile at me

Page 29: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

The phonology of English consonants: L-darkening

Marble Arch: syllabic /l/ is always dark!

Page 30: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

The phonology of English consonants: aspiration

Two forms of aspiration:

- short h-like sound after /p t k/: pay, tip, keen

- devoicing of sonorant consonant after /p t k/: pray, trip, queen

cf. ray, rip, wean

Page 31: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

The phonology of English consonants: aspiration

Aspirated: relatively strong aspiration, no alternative allophone

Unaspirated 1: weaker or no aspiration, alternative allophones:- column (d): tapping/flapping []- column (e): (pre)glottalization/glottal replacement []

Unaspirated 2: no aspiration

Page 32: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal
Page 33: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal
Page 34: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal
Page 35: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal
Page 36: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

Tapping/flapping:

atom = Adam

Page 37: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal
Page 38: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

Tapping/flapping:

latter = ladder

Page 39: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal
Page 40: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

Tapping/flapping:

Gerappa :-)http://www.youtube.com/watch?

v=daoo5Of3wR0

Page 41: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

The phonology of English consonants: aspiration

The pronunciation of the consonant is determined by its position in the syllable:

Page 42: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

ambisyllabicity

Page 43: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

© PÁ

Page 44: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal
Page 45: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal
Page 46: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal
Page 47: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal
Page 48: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal
Page 49: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

The phonology of English consonants: R-dropping revisited

Page 50: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

The phonology of English consonants: L-darkening revisited

Page 51: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

The phonology of English consonants in the syllable: phonotactics

Page 52: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

The phonology of English consonants in the syllable: phonotactics

Page 53: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

the Sonority Principle:within syllables, sonority increases towards the vowel, which forms a sonority peak, and then sonority decreases; or, on both sides of syllables, sonority increases towards the vowel

Page 54: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal
Page 55: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

Violations of the Sonority Principle:

Page 56: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

Summary of Sonority Principle violations:

Page 57: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

The English syllable: phonotactic restrictions (1):

● the centre of the syllable is the sonority peak, which is usually a vowel (or: syllabic consonant, cf. bottle, button)● the peak is the only obligatory constituent: there are syllables with a single vowel and no consonants (e.g., English I/eye // or Hungarian ő '(s)he'), but there are no syllables without a peak (in Hungarian, without a vowel)● the English peak can be preceded by zero to three consonants and followed by zero to four● syllable-initial position: single consonant before the peak: any consonant except //● initial two-member clusters: the Sonority Principle! (e.g., twin, trip, tube, play, pray, puke, quick, cry, clean, cube, fry, fling, dry, Gwen, etc.). One consonant, /s/, can be combined with any of the others except for voiced obstruents and /r/ (e.g., snip, slip, swim, sport, skirt, stink, sphere, etc.) (very often: sonority sequencing violations)● illegal initial clusters: *pn, *ps, *gn, *kn, *pt, *mn (pneumonia, psycho, gnu, knight, pterodactyl, mnemonics); the letter <x> at the beginning of words like Xerox, xylophone and Xanadu does not denote a /ks/ sequence but a single /z/● *tl, *tn, *pw, *fw – homorganic clusters, i.e., their members share the place of articulation

Page 58: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal
Page 59: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

The English syllable: phonotactic restrictions (2):

● initial three-member sequences: always begin with /s/ (strength, spring, square, splash, %stew, etc.) (always violate the Sonority Principle)

● syllable-final position: any single consonant except for /h/ + in non-rhotic accents like RP, /r/● two-member clusters after the peak: e.g., lamp, month, land, mince, help, bulb, elf, %carp, %herb

● the vowel and the following consonant(s) together: the syllable rhyme:● e.g., // can only be followed by coronal consonants (shout, crowd, south, town, etc.)● // can only be followed by alveolars (exploit, void, voice, noise, coin, coil, moist, point)● a long vowel is only possible before a consonant cluster if the cluster is made up of coronals (mind, boost, faint, etc.)● in word-final open syllables (i.e., without a closing consonant) the vowel has to be either long (monophthong or diphthong, e.g., taboo, array, RP near) or unstressed (happy, comma, etc.)

Page 60: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal
Page 61: Consonants and vowels 1: Consonants of articulation the degree of openness of the vocal tract, with the resulting relative loudness of sounds called sonority. The more open the vocal

(Next topic: Vowels)