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Spoken language phonetics: Vowel articulation, transcription

Spoken language phonetics: Vowel articulation, transcription. LING 200 Spring 2006. Homework #2. Due Thurs. Apr 13 at the beginning of section Ch. 6 problems (5) a-g, j (6)-(7) (9) (10) a, c, e (11)-(12). Announcements. Quiz on Ch. 6 extended to 2:30 pm today (**just this once**)

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Spoken language phonetics: Vowel articulation, transcription

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  1. Spoken language phonetics:Vowel articulation, transcription LING 200 Spring 2006

  2. Homework #2 • Due Thurs. Apr 13 at the beginning of section • Ch. 6 problems • (5) a-g, j • (6)-(7) • (9) • (10) a, c, e • (11)-(12)

  3. Announcements • Quiz on Ch. 6 extended to 2:30 pm today (**just this once**) • Quiz on Ch. 7 (minus first section, ‘The Pronunciation of Morphemes’) opens Sunday (4-9) 10 am, closes Wed (4-12) noon • Clickers should be in book store today • extra credit?

  4. A FAQ • Which phonetic symbols do we have to memorize in this class? • Answer: those used for English

  5. Manner of articulation (degree of occlusion) • How close are lower and upper articulator? • Relatively close: consonants • Relatively far apart: vowels

  6. Vowels Some dimensions of vowel systems • Height: high, mid, low • Backness: front, central, back • Labiality (lip rounding): rounded, unrounded

  7. Vowel backness x height

  8. The Human Language Evolves. “With and Without Words” • Clip on vowel systems

  9. A five vowel inventory e.g. Spanish

  10. Spanish vowels

  11. Lip rounding

  12. Phonetic description of vowels • (height – backness – rounding) • [i] = high front unrounded vowel • [e] = mid front unrounded vowel • [o] = mid back rounded vowel • [u] = high back rounded vowel • [A] = low central (-back) unrounded vowel • cf. [a] = low front unrounded vowel

  13. IPA vowel chart

  14. Another five vowel inventory Mandarin (Chinese) [y] = high front rounded vowel [] = mid back unrounded vowel

  15. Mandarin vowel quality [  ] = high falling tone

  16. Long vs. short vowels • Vowel “quality” • height: high vs. mid vs. low • backness: front vs. central vs. back • rounding: rounded vs. unrounded • Vowel “quantity”: long vs. short

  17. Danish front vowel qualities

  18. Danish vowel length contrasts

  19. English vowels • English, a Germanic language Proto-Germanic West North East Faroese Icelandic Norwegian Swedish Danish Gothic German Afrikaans Dutch Frisian English

  20. Proto-Germanic Vowels

  21. Middle English vowels < The English Language

  22. Middle English long and short vowels minus the diphthongs

  23. Modern English • Historical length > ‘tense’/ ‘lax’ contrast • Long vowels > ‘tense’ • Short vowels > ‘lax’

  24. Western North America Basic set of contrasts in stressed syllables

  25. Western North America contrasts in stressed syllables

  26. Acoustic plot of vowel quality a female speaker from southern California

  27. Further east in North America contrasts in stressed syllables

  28. Further east in North America contrasts in stressed syllables

  29. [] vs. [] A female speaker from New York City • cot vs. caught • Polly vs. Paulie • Don vs. dawn • coffee vs. cough • body vs. bawdy

  30. Acoustic plot of vowel quality a male speaker from southern New Jersey

  31. [] in Western N. America • In Western North America, [] only before [r]: • [mr] more • [mor] mower([r] = syllabic [r]) • [mAr] mar

  32. English vowels: rhotic nuclei A basic set of [Vr] combinations in North American English

  33. English vowels: rhotic nuclei A basic set of [Vr] combinations in North American English some varieties have more vowel quality distinctions before [r]: Mary [e], merry [E], marry []

  34. More on [r] • Continuation of clip from The Human Language Evolves. “With and Without Words”

  35. Diphthongs • 2 vowel qualities • [w]/[w] = []: [hwd] how’d • [j] = []: [hjd] hide • [j] = []: [tjd] toyed • For many native speakers of English, [e], [o] are diphthongs • [ej] = [eI] [hed] ([hejd]) hayed • [ow] = [oU] [hod] ([howd]) hoed

  36. Unstressed vowels • Stressed and unstressed syllables • verbs: nouns: • to [riEkt] a [ríEkt] reject • to [protEst] a [prótEst] protest to [prótEst] (‘stage a protest’)

  37. English unstressed vowels [] only occurs in unstressed syllables

  38. English unstressed vowels • [] + nasals, liquids • For many speakers, • [r] [pkr] picker • [l] = [l] [pkl] [pkl pickle • [n] = [n] [Tkn] [Tkn] thicken • [m] = [m] [rDm] [rDm] rhythm [ ] = syllabic

  39. Transcription practice • scrimmage • schism • asthma • azalea • mayonnaise

  40. Transcription practice • scrimmage [skrIm] • schism [skIzm] • asthma [zm] • azalea [zelj] • mayonnaise [mnez]

  41. More transcription practice • kook • cucumber • mortgage • grammar • language

  42. kook [kuk] • cucumber [kjukmbr] • mortgage [mrg] • grammar [græmr] • language [leNgw]

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