Week 1: Articulatory Phonetics (Ladefoged 2001)SWU LI 711 Meagan Louie August 16th, 2016
1 Introduction
1.1 Phonology
• This is a course in phonology- the systematic study of SOUNDS and how they PATTERN in language
• Observation I: Different languages have different sounds/phones. i.e., they have different phonetic inventories
Blackfoot Consonants:. [p], [t], [k], [P]. [s], [h]. [ts], [ks]. [m], [n], [w], [j]
English Consonants:. [p], [t], [k], [b], [d], [g]. [f], [T], [s], [S], [h],. [v], [D], [z], [Z]. [tS], [dZ]. [m], [n], [N], [w], [j], l], [ô]
• Observation II: Different languages allow different sound combinations
English Consonant Clusters:. spl-, spr-, str,. sp-, st-, sk-, sm-, sn-, sl-, sw-. pl-, pr-, .... ...-rsts, -ksTs
Cantonese Consonant Clusters:. N/A
→ Different language have different sound systems
Q: What is the range of variation in sound systems?
• But before we can investigate this question, we need a systematic way todescribe sounds. Phonetics gives us a way to do this.
1.2 Phonetics: Describing Sounds
Q: What are the properties of speech sounds?
• Three main subfields of phonetics:
1 articulatory phonetics: how speech sounds are made. (eg., articulator placement, vocal fold configuration, etc.)
2 acoustic phonetics: the physical properties of speech sounds. (i.e., frequency, wavelength, etc.)
Time (s)5.613 6.5480
4000
Frequency(H
z)
5.73319396 6.35870804
. Spectrogram of the word “food” [fud]
3 perceptual phonetics: how speech sounds are perceived. (eg., pitch vs frequency, the McGurk Effect)
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• The international phonetic alphabet (IPA) is a transcription system thatdescribes speech sounds according to their articulatory phonetic features
. → So we’ll focus on articulatory phonetics
• IPA symbols (see IPA chart). - represent a single sound segment (with multiple features). - are usually enclosed in square brackets, eg., [m]
2 Articulatory Phonetics: Consonants
• Speech sounds are made by pushing air through your vocal tract
They can be categorized according to their
1. Air source: lungs (pulmonic)1
2. Air flow direction: out (egressive), in (ingressive)
. These factors define a sound’s airstream mechanism
For now, we’ll only consider one airstream mechanism. - pulmonic egressive sounds
• Speech sounds can also be categorized according to whether they involvea constriction in the vocal tract
– vowels: mostly unconstricted vocal tract - air flows freely
– consonants: constricted vocal tract - air is obstructed
• Further categories of constriction(s)
1. Place of Articulation (PoA). i.e., which articulators (eg., tongue, lips, etc.) are used. (see vocal tract diagram on the right)
2. Manner of Articulation (MoA). i.e., type of constriction (eg., full closure, near closure, etc.)
3. Laryngeal Properties. i.e., the configuration of the glottis and vocal folds/chords
1The other types of air sources are glottalic and velaric - we probably won’t discuss these.
1. Glottis
2. Vocal Folds/Chords
3. Lower Teeth
4. Upper Teeth
5. Lips
6. Nasal Cavity
7. Alveolar Ridge
8. Hard Palate
9. Soft Palate/Velum
10. Uvula
11. Epiglottis
12. Larynx
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2.1 Place of Articulation
• Speech sounds can be categorized according to Place of Articulation. - i.e., according to the ‘active articulator’ (the articulator that moves)
(1) LABIAL: using the lips [p, b, m, f, v](2) CORONAL: using the tip or blade of the tongue [t, d, s, S, Z](3) DORSAL: using the back of the tongue [k, g, q, Q]
• place of articulation can further be categorized according to the. ’passive articulator’ (where the active articulator moves to)
LABIAL: CORONAL: DORSAL:Bilabial [p, b, m] Dental [T, D] Palatal [j]Labiodental [f, v] Alveolar [t, d, n, s] Velar [k, g, N]
Retroflex [ú, ã ] Uvular [q, ö, X, K]Palato-Alveolar [S, Z]
PoA Examples from English
Bilabial: pit [phIt], tap [thæp], moon [mun], same [seIm]
Labiodental: fan [fæn], phone [foUn], very [vE.ôi], save [seIv]
Dental: this [DIs], weather [wE.D@ô], think [TINk], path [phæT]
Alveolar: rat [ôæt], sit [sIt], do [du], no [noU], lie [laI]
Palatal-Alveolar:
splash [splæS], shop [SAp], rouge [ôuZ], genre [ZAn.ô@]
Palatal: yawn [jAn], yell [jEl]
Velar: pick [phIk], pig [phIg], sing [sIN]
Glottal: uh-oh [2.PoU], happy [hæ.phi]
Exercises (Use your IPA chart!)
1. What place of articulation do the first segments in these words have?pie, buy, my, finish, value, tie, die, night, sigh, zip, laugh, write, wrong, rain,shy, she, show, you, yellow, cat, gain, height
2. What place of articulation do the final segments in these words have?pack, pick, hang, sing, wrong, rough, fish, rat, car, tall, give, drive, meat, pass
2.2 Manner of Articulation
• Speech sounds can be categorized according to Manner of Articulation. - i.e., the degree of closure between the articulators
1. STOP: complete closure of articulators
– oral (nasal cavity blocked by velum)2 [p, t, k]– nasal (nasal cavity open) [m, n, N]
Diagram from Ladefoged 2001
2. FRICATIVE: close approximation of articulators. (turbulent airstream) [s, z, T, D, f, v, S, h]
Diagram from Ladefoged 2001
3. APPROXIMANT: close approximation of articulators. (non-turbulent airstream) [w, j, l, r]
4. AFFRICATE: stop with fricative release [>tS,
>dZ]
2Another name for an oral stop is a plosive.
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Exercises (Use your IPA chart!)
1. Whatmanner of articulation do the first segments in these words have?pie, buy, my, finish, value, tie, die, night, sigh, zip, laugh, write, wrong, rain,shy, she, show, you, yellow, cat, gain, height
2. Whatmanner of articulation do the final segments in these words have?pack, pay, hang, fare, wrong, rough, fish, rat, car, tall, give, drive, meat, pass
2.3 Laryngeal Mechanism
• Egressive pulmonic consonants can be categorized according to
(i) VOICING - i.e., whether the vocal folds are vibrating
– VOICED (closed, vibrating vocal folds){b, d, g, z, v, m, n, a, i , u, e, o, dZ, D, , ...}
– VOICELESS (open vocal folds){p, t, k, s, S, f, tS, T, ...}
(ii) ASPIRATION- i.e., whether the sound is followed by a puff of air
– ASPIRATED (puff of air){ph, th, kh
}
– UNASPIRATED (no puff of air){p, t, k}
CONSONANT ARTICULATORY FEATURES: Summary
Consonants can be categorized according to the following features:
1. Place of Articulation (bilabial, alveolar, velar, etc.,)
2. Manner of Articulation (stop, nasal, fricative, etc.,)
3. Laryngeal Properties (voiceless, aspirated, etc.,)
3 Articulatory Phonetics: Vowels
• Recall, speech sounds are made by pushing air through your vocal tract. - and vowels involve a lack of construction and free-flowing air
• ...but your tongue and lips are placed in different locations:
Diagram from Ladefoged 2001
1. Vowel [i] as in heed2. Vowel [I] as in hid3. Vowel [E] as in head4. Vowel [æ] as in had
5. Vowel [A] as in father
6. Vowel [U] as in good
7. Vowel [u] as in food
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• The different tongue/lip configurations define different cavities of airwithin your vocal tract
• These cavities have different resonant/harmonic frequencies, which iswhy different vowels sound distinct
3.1 Vowel Features
VOWELS are characterized in terms of the following articulatory features:. height, front/backness, rounding, tense/laxness3
We’ll use this minimal vowel chart to go through the features. (see IPA chart for full list of symbols)
3Some languages make use of a feature Advanced Tongue Root (±ATR)
(i) HEIGHT (i.e., high [i] vs low [a] ). relates to the vertical position of the tongue
(ii) FRONT/BACKNESS (i.e., front [y] vs back [u]). relates to the front/back position of the tongue
(iii) ROUNDNESS (i.e., round [y] vs unround [i]). relates to roundness of lips
(iv) LAXNESS (i.e., tense [i] vs lax [iI). relates to the degree of height/backness
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IPA Symbol Example
[i] English: sheep [Sip], eat [it], free [fôi]
[y]French: tu [ty], lu [ly], bu [by], German: mude[mud@], uber [yb5], Cantonese: ”book” [Sy]1,”pig” [
>tsy]1, ”fish” [jy]6
[I] English: lip [lIp], hit [hIt], sick [sIk]
[W]
[u] English: root [ôut], hoop [hup], soon [sun]
[U] English: could [khUd], look [lUk], full [fUl]
[e]French: aimer [e.me], English: hey [hej]/[heI], lay[lej]/[leI], page [phej
>dZ]/[pheI
>dZ]
[o] French: peau [pho], English: low [low]/[loU], boat[bowt]/[boUt], soak [sowk]/[soUk]
[@] English: about [@.bawt], sofa [sow.f@], amazing[@.mej.zIN]
[E] English: let [lEt], wreck [ôEk], hen [hEn]
[2] English: bus [b2s], cut [k2t], some [s2m]
[O] English: awed [O:d], hawk [hO:k], bought [bO:t]
[æ] English: hat [hæt], can [khæn], map [mæp]
[a] Japanese: ”fish” [sa.kha.na]
[A] English: hot [hAt], hop [hAp], sock [sAk]
[aj]/[aI] English: pie [phaj], ride [ôajd], time [thajm]
aw]/[aU] English: cow [khAw], loud [lawd], clown [khlawn]
[Oj]/[OI] English: toy [thOj], droid [>dZôOjd], coin [khOjn]
NOTE 1: Some dialects of English do not have the vowel [O]. Thesedialects,a which have the caught-cot merger pronounce the word pairsodd/awed, collar/caller, wok/walk with [A]. Dialectsb which lack the caught-cot merger pronounce the first member of the pair with [A] and thesecond member of the pair with [O].
aeg., my dialectbeg., Lady Mary’s RP dialect from Downton Abbey
NOTE 2: Some dialects of English do not have the vowel [O]. Thesedialects,a which have the caught-cot merger pronounce the word pairsodd/awed, collar/caller, wok/walk with [A]. Dialectsb which lack the caught-cot merger pronounce the first member of the pair with [A] and thesecond member of the pair with [O].
aeg., my dialectbeg., Lady Mary from Downton Abbey
VOWEL ARTICULATORY FEATURES: Summary
Vowels can be categorized according to the following features:
1. Height (high, mid, low)
2. Front/Backness (front, central, back)
3. Roundness (round, unround)
4. Laxness (tense, lax)
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Study Guide
You should know these terms, and what they refer to:
1. Place of Articulation, Manner of Articulation, Laryngeal Properties
2. Labial, Coronal, Dorsal (PoA acc. to active articulator)
3. Bilabial, Labiodental, Dental, Alveolar, Palatal-Alveolar, Palatal,Velar, Glottal
4. oral stop, nasal stop, fricative, approximant, affricate
5. voicing, aspiration
6. height, front/backness, roundness, laxness
You should be able to:
1. Label a diagram of the articulators in the vocal tract
2. Categorize an IPA symbol according to. (i) PoA, MoA, and laryngeal mechanism, or. (ii) height, front/backness, roundness, tense/laxness
References
Ladefoged, Peter. 2001. A course in phonetics. 4th edition. Orlando: HarcourtCollege Publishers.
4 Practice with the IPA Chart
1. Provide the IPA symbol for the following sounds:
a) Voiceless, unaspirated, uvular stop mmm
b) Voiceless, palatal fricative mmm
c) Voiced, post-alveolar fricative mmm
d) Voiced, bilabial stop mmm
e) Voiceless, aspirated, alveolar stop mmm
f) (Voiced) alveolar nasal stop mmm
g) (Voiced) alveolar approximant mmm
2. Provide an articulatory description for the symbols in table 1 and 2.
3. Convert the following IPA transcription into English orthography:
(i) DEô w2z w2ns @phAn @ thajm @ phOô wIdow hu hæd @n ownli s2n nejmd>dZæk ænd @ khaw nejmd mIlkhi wajt
(ii) Al Dej hæd thu lIv An w2z D@ mIlk D@ khaw gejv EvrI mOônIN, wI>tS Dej
khEôid thu D@ mAôkIt ænd sowld.
(iii) b2t w2n mOônIN mIlkhi wajt gejv now mIlk ænd Dej dId nAt now w2tthu du.
(iv) “w2t Sæl wi du, w2t Sæl wi du?” sEd D@ wIdow, rININ hEô hændz
(v) “>tSIô 2p m2DEô, aj wIl fajnd w@ôk s2mwEô” sEd
>dZæk
(vi) “wi m2st sEl mIlkhi wajt ænd wIT D@ m2ni, owphIn @ SAp, Oô s2mTIN”sEd hIz m2DEô
(vii) sow>dZæk thUk D@ khaw ænd staôtId wælkhIN thuwOôdz D@ mAôkit.
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IPA Voicing/Aspiration Place Manner
[t] voiceless, unaspirated alveolar stop
[kh]
[S]
[B]
[N]
[P]
[M]
[ñ]
[D]
[T]
[z]
[j]
[x]
[m˚
]
Table 1: Consonant Articulatory Features
IPA Tense/Lax Height Backness Round/Unround
[i] tense high front unrounded
[y]
[A]
[2]
[O]
[u]
[W]
[U]
[@]
[æ]
[e]
[E]
[ø]
[œ]
Table 2: Vowel Articulatory Features
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CONSONANTS (PULMONIC) © 2015 IPA Bilabial Labiodental Dental Alveolar Postalveolar Retroflex Palatal Velar Uvular Pharyngeal Glottal
Plosive Nasal Trill Tap or Flap Fricative Lateral fricative Approximant Lateral approximant
Symbols to the right in a cell are voiced, to the left are voiceless. Shaded areas denote articulations judged impossible.
CONSONANTS (NON-PULMONIC) Clicks Voiced implosives Ejectives
Bilabial Bilabial Examples:
Dental Dental/alveolar Bilabial
(Post)alveolar Palatal Dental/alveolar
Palatoalveolar Velar Velar
Alveolar lateral Uvular Alveolar fricative
VOWELS Front Central Back
Close
Close-mid
Open-mid
Open Where symbols appear in pairs, the one to the right represents a rounded vowel.
OTHER SYMBOLS Voiceless labial-velar fricative Alveolo-palatal fricatives Voiced labial-velar approximant Voiced alveolar lateral flap Voiced labial-palatal approximant Simultaneous and
Voiceless epiglottal fricative Affricates and double articulations can be represented by two symbols joined by a tie bar if necessary.
Voiced epiglottal fricative Epiglottal plosive
SUPRASEGMENTALS Primary stress Secondary stress Long
Half-long
Extra-short
Minor (foot) group
Major (intonation) group
Syllable break
Linking (absence of a break)
DIACRITICS Some diacritics may be placed above a symbol with a descender, e.g. Voiceless Breathy voiced Dental
Voiced Creaky voiced Apical
Aspirated Linguolabial Laminal
More rounded Labialized Nasalized
Less rounded Palatalized Nasal release
Advanced Velarized Lateral release
Retracted Pharyngealized No audible release
Centralized Velarized or pharyngealized
Mid-centralized Raised ( = voiced alveolar fricative)
Syllabic Lowered ( = voiced bilabial approximant)
Non-syllabic Advanced Tongue Root
Rhoticity Retracted Tongue Root
TONES AND WORD ACCENTS LEVEL CONTOURor Extra or Risinghigh High Falling Mid High
rising Low Low
rising Extra Rising-
low fallingDownstep Global rise Upstep Global fall
THE INTERNATIONAL PHONETIC ALPHABET (revised to 2015)
Typefaces: Doulos SIL (metatext); Doulos SIL, IPA Kiel, IPA LS Uni (symbols)