1 / 23

Introduction to linguistics – The sounds of German R21118

Introduction to linguistics – The sounds of German R21118. Dr Nicola McLelland. Lecture 2 Phonetics. How are sounds produced? Manner and place of articulation The vowel quadrilateral Vowel quantity and quality. How are sounds produced?.

mayda
Download Presentation

Introduction to linguistics – The sounds of German R21118

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Introduction to linguistics – The sounds of German R21118 Dr Nicola McLelland

  2. Lecture 2 Phonetics • How are sounds produced? • Manner and place of articulation • The vowel quadrilateral • Vowel quantity and quality

  3. How are sounds produced? • place of articulation: where the articulatory organs are when we make a speech sound (e.g tongue tip at ridge behind teeth) • manner of articulation: the type of obstruction in the mouth made by the tongue and / or other articulators (complete closure or lesser obstruction?) • voiced vs. unvoiced: • oral vs. nasal

  4. Voicing voiced vs. unvoiced: When the vocal folds in the larynx are close together, air from the lungs rushing past them causes them to vibrate > voicing (cf. a reed in an oboe etc.)

  5. The larynx (=voice box) with vocal folds (=vocal cords) *glottis = opening between vocal folds *epiglottis = “lid” (tongue root) which covers the glottis when we swallow

  6. The nature of voicing For voiced sounds, the vocal cords are held together by the action of the arytenoid cartilages, but they are held together less tightly than for a glottal stop.

  7. When air is forced up the trachea from the lungs, at a certain pressure it is able to force its way through the vocal cords, pushing them open (2, 3 and 4). Because of the resulting drop in pressure, the vocal cords snap together, at the lower edge first, closing again (6-10). The cycle then begins again.

  8. A single cycle of opening and closing takes in the region of 1/100th second: so the cycle repeats at rates in the region of 100 times per second

  9. Voicelessness Vocal cords apart > no obstruction to air flow > no noise produced by larynx (voice-box) Whisper If there is a sufficiently high rate of airflow through the open glottis, a quiet disruption of the air, whisper, results. The glottal fricative [h] has whisper phonation, as do whispered vowels.

  10. Voiced sounds • all vowel sounds are voiced (except in the case of whispering) • Consonants can be voiced or unvoiced, e.g. [ b d g ] or [p t k] • Test if a sound is voiced by placing your hand on your larynx to feel the vibrations

  11. Place of articulation: the vocal tract

  12. Place of articulation • See places of articulation MS word document! • We can describe sounds by which articulators are involved, and where

  13. The stops or “plosives” • Create a complete obstruction in the mouth: • With both lips …. • With tongue at the alveolar ridge …. • With tongue at the soft palate (velum) ….

  14. The stops or “plosives” • Create a complete obstruction in the mouth: • With both lips …. [p b] • With tongue at the alveolar ridge …. [t d] • With tongue at the soft palate (velum) …. [ k g]

  15. The stops or “plosives” • Create a complete obstruction in the mouth: • With both lips …. [p b] = bilabial • With tongue at the alveolar ridge …. [t d] = alveolar • With tongue at the soft palate (velum) …. [ k g] = velar

  16. Oral stops and nasal stops • [b d g p t k] are all oral stops – when the air is released, it comes out of the mouth • there are also nasal stops, where the obstruction is in the mouth, but the air is released through the nose, by lowering the velum : • obstruction at the lips …. • obstruction at the alveolar ridge … • obstruction at the velum …..

  17. nasal stops – with velum lowered • obstruction at the lips …. [m] • obstruction at the alveolar ridge …[n] • obstruction at the velum …..[ŋ]

  18. Manner of articulation 1. Stops • we’ve already described the manner of articulation for stops: there is a complete closure at the mouth, which is then released, allowing air to escape

  19. 2. Fricatives • for fricatives: the articulators are close together, so that they cause interference to the airstream (often a hissy sound) but there is not a complete blockage • e.g. ….. ?

  20. Fricatives …. • fricatives: the articulators are close together, so that they cause interference to the airstream (often a hissy sound) but there is not a complete blockage: • [f v] labiodental (Vater, Vase) • [s z] alveolar (essen, See) • [ʃ ʒ] palatal-alveolar (esh) (Schnee, • Journalist) • (Red = voiced)

  21. Fricatives …. • [ʃ] palatal-alveolar (esh) (Schnee) • [ç] palatal (ich, Honig) • [x] velar (Buch) • [h] glottal fricative (Haus) • (all voiceless)

  22. Glottal stop …. ʔ • When the vocal folds are tightly closed • eg wha’ a lo’ of bo’les • In standard German, it occurs in front of any stressed initial vowel • E.g. [ʔaɪn ʔɑpfəl] ein Apfel

  23. The vowels • See David Brett’s presentation on vowels

More Related