english variety + allophony

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English Variety + Allophony September 16, 2015

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English Variety + Allophony. September 18, 2013. A Word of Caution. The vowel system of English can vary greatly from one dialect to another. Ex: the vowels of Canadian English have shifted away from the General North American standard… (for some, but not all, speakers) Shift #1:. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: English Variety + Allophony

English Variety + Allophony

September 16, 2015

Page 2: English Variety + Allophony

For Friday• Please take a stab at the following exercises from

Chapter 2 of A Course in Phonetics before Friday:

• A 1-10

• B 11-20

• D 31-40

• (American speaker)

• (phonemic transcriptions)

• Here’s the online link:• http://www.phonetics.ucla.edu/course/chapter2/exercises.htm

• This will be a practice transcription exercise that we will go over together in class.

Page 3: English Variety + Allophony

Helpful Hints• You can use Praat to help you listen to the sound files

for the transcription exercise.

• Let’s walk through the basics together…

• Another thing: I post all of the lecture notes (in Powerpoint) for a reason.

• It can help to listen to the example sounds at home!

Page 4: English Variety + Allophony

A Word of Caution• The vowel system of English can vary greatly from one dialect to another.

• Ex: the vowels of Canadian English have shifted away from their American counterparts…

• (for some, but not all, speakers)

• Shift #1:

• Shift #2:

Unshifted:

Unshifted:

• There are also new shifts underway!

• Shift #3: “head”

• Shift #4: “hid”

• Shift #5: “hood”

Page 5: English Variety + Allophony

/u/-fronting• The final element of the shift involves the “fronting” of the vowel /u/.

• Compare:

Los Angeles

Saskatoon

• Note that not every Canadian does this.

Calgary

• Also note that North American vowel systems are diverging:

• Chicago

• Saskatoon

• New York CitySource: http://accent.gmu.edu

Page 6: English Variety + Allophony

What’s Going On?• Vowel articulations can be characterized along four

dimensions:

1. Height (of tongue body)

• high, mid, low

2. Front-back (of tongue body)

• front, central, back

3. Roundedness (of lips)

• rounded vs. unrounded

4. “Tenseness”

• tense/lax

Page 7: English Variety + Allophony

Corner Vowels

Page 8: English Variety + Allophony

X-Ray Videos

Page 9: English Variety + Allophony

The (American) Vowel Space

Page 10: English Variety + Allophony
Page 11: English Variety + Allophony
Page 12: English Variety + Allophony

Further Observations• In the Canadian vowel shift:

• However, this rule only applies to native .

• For borrowed words, [a] or [æ]

• For example:

pasta

Mazda

gracias

garage

• Also note: William Shatner.

Page 13: English Variety + Allophony

Moral of the Story #2• Phonology is important.

• Sounds exhibit patterns in a language.

• Remember:

• Specific allophones of a phoneme often emerge in specific phonetic contexts.

• Ex: the flap in English.

• appears when /t/ or /d/ precede an unstressed syllable

• metal metallic• The production of specific allophones is often specified by phonological rule.

Page 14: English Variety + Allophony

Patterns• There is an interesting rule regarding the production of in some English dialects.

• Compare Canadian English with English English

CE EE“care”“park”“read”“other”“ride”“carrot”“cart”

• Do you see any patterns?

Page 15: English Variety + Allophony

The Rules• In English English:

• surfaces as when it precedes vowels

• Examples: read, carrot• surfaces as when it appears at the end of a syllable or word

• Examples: care, other

• makes a preceding vowel long when it appears before a consonant in the same syllable

• Examples: park, cart

Page 16: English Variety + Allophony

Rhotic vs. Non-Rhotic• Note: English is divided up between “rhotic” dialects and “non-rhotic” dialects

• rhotic: appears everywhere

• non-rhotic: disappears, sometimes

• Rhotic dialects:

• Canadian English, General American, Irish English, Scots English…

• Non-Rhotic dialects:

• English English, Australian English, some areas of the American East Coast…

Page 17: English Variety + Allophony

Overheard in New YorkOld lady with heavy accent, pointing to a closed store:

What’s that?

Young lady: I’m not sure.

Old lady: Is that a pahwn shop?

Young lady (startled): No, that looks like a pawn shop…

Old lady: That’s what I said--a pahwn shop.

Young lady (relieved): Ohhh, I thought you said ‘porn shop’!

Old lady: No, I said, ‘pahwn’, not ‘pahwn.’

Young lady: Oh, you say them exactly the same!Source: www.overheardinnewyork.com

Page 18: English Variety + Allophony

Overheard in New YorkOld lady: I do?

Young lady: Yeah! Saw ‘aw.’

Old lady: Ahw.

Young lady: Now say ‘or.’

Old lady: Ahw.

Young lady: No, it’s orrr. With an R.

Old lady: That’s what I said -- ‘ahw’.

Source: www.overheardinnewyork.com