1 / 35

SPEECH ARTICULATION : Vowels

SPEECH ARTICULATION : Vowels. David Brett. Vowels may differ in three ways. Length Quality (i.e. the difference between /i:/ and /u:/ Oral or nasal production (unlike French, this does not have a phonemic function in English). We will now look at how vowels vary in quality….

stacy-poole
Download Presentation

SPEECH ARTICULATION : Vowels

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. SPEECH ARTICULATION:Vowels • David Brett

  2. Vowels may differ in three ways • Length • Quality (i.e. the difference between /i:/ and /u:/ • Oral or nasal production (unlike French, this does not have a phonemic function in English)

  3. We will now look at how vowels vary in quality…

  4. These are x-rays of a person producing different vowels

  5. In the close front position (unrounded) we produce /i/

  6. In the open front position (unrounded) we produce /a/

  7. Back open (unrounded) : //

  8. Back close (rounded): /u/

  9. Connecting these points gives us a box called the Vowel Quadrilateral

  10. All the vowel sounds that the human voice can produce may be plotted within the limits of the quadrilateral

  11. While the quadrilateral system is widely used it remains a hypothesis and is not necessarily the only possible way of representing vowels

  12. Here is the vowel quadrilateral divided into sectors with the IPA symbols at fixed points. These are called Cardinal Vowels.

  13. This is the full set:

  14. N.B. Do not confuse symbols for cardinal vowels with language specific phonemes • The IPA vowel quadrilateral is a grid on which we can plot vowels • It indicates the total area in which vowels can be produced by human beings, the cardinal vowels are fixed reference points on this chart, just like lines of longtitude and latitude on a map • Plots of language specific vowels do not usually correspond to the cardinal vowels, e.g. the Italian /a/ does not correspond to the cardinal vowel [a]

  15. The vowels appear in pairs depending on whether they are articulated with spread lips, (unrounded ) indicated here in green:

  16. Or with rounded lips (red):

  17. Generally, front vowels are unrounded and back vowels rounded…

  18. Italian and English follow this pattern…

  19. …while German and French do not (v. /y/, // etc.)

  20. These are the places of articulation of English short and long vowels

  21. The vowel system of Br English

  22. The chart of Standard Italian vowels would look like this:

  23. The fact that Italian lacks vowels in the central area may well explain why Italian students of English have so much trouble with these sounds

  24. However, it is important to remember that the cardinal vowel system describes vowels from an articulatory point of view…

  25. …whereas vowels are an acoustic phenomenon and may also be described according to their acoustic properties.

  26. Spectrogram of four vowels: /i:/, //, /:/ and /u:/

  27. Each vowel has a different disposition of formants (peaks at certain frequencies)

  28. Plotting the values of the 1st and 2nd formants results in a graph which greatly resembles the quadrilateral

  29. We can note that the values of the acoustic properties are not always exactly the same: they tend to vary considerably

  30. This type of analysis can be used to illustrate the difference between native (left) and non-native speakers’ production (right)

  31. Native (left) and non-native speakers’ production (right)

  32. Any questions?

More Related