Phonetics Introduction
Phonetics Introduction
CCC 316
Hearing what is said vs. listening to how it's said. (we
are very good at decoding meaning; bad at listening!)
Learning new (complex) articulation patterns (new
gestures are (mostly) easy; but NOT when
communicating)
correspondence.
The function of language is to exchange
information.
English is more difficult to learn than
Chinese.
Black English is not standard and should be
reformed.
2. What is Language?
Language is not to be confused with
human speech, of which it is only a
definite part, though certainly an essential
one. It is both a social product of the
faculty of speech and a collection of
necessary conventions that have been
adopted by a social body to permit
individuals to exercise that faculty.
--Ferdinand de Saussure (1857-1913):
Course in General Linguistics (1916)
Getting started:
Phonetics
Phonetics is often defined with respect to phonology. Both
THE ORGANS OF
SPEECH AND
THEIR FUNCTIONS
Lips
- they serve for creating different sounds - mainly
the labial, bilabial (e.g. /p/, /b/, /m/, /hw/, and /w/)
and labio-dental consonant sounds (e. g. /f/ and
/v/ - and thus create an important part of the
speech apparatus.
Upper Lip
Lower Lip
teeth
- small whitish structures found in
jaws
- responsible for creating sounds
mainly the labio-dental (e.g. /f/
and /v/and lingua-dental (e.g. //and
//)
Teeth
tongue
- with its wide variety of possible movements, it assists in
forming the sounds of speech.
TONGUE
Back
Middle(Dorsu
m)
Front(Blad
e)
Tip(Apex
)
Alveolar ridge
- hard ridge behind the upper front
teeth. It is between the roof of the
mouth and the upper teeth.
Alveolar
Ridge
Hard palate
a thin horizontal bony plate of the skull, located in the roof of the
mouth.
the interaction between the tongue and the hard palate is
essential in the formation of certain speech sounds, notably
/t/, /d/, and /j/.
Hard
Palate
Velum or Soft
Palate
Uvula
-
Uvula
Glottis
the folds
as the vocal folds vibrate, the resulting vibration
produces a buzzing quality to the speech called
voice or voicing or pronunciation.
sound production involving only the glottis is
called glottal. Example is the sound /h/.
Glottis
SPEECH ORGANS
Alveolar ridge
Hard Palate
Soft Palate
Upper lip
Lower lip
Teeth
Uvula
Back
Middle(Dorsum)
Front(Blade)
Tip (Apex)
Glottis