1 / 18

Linguistics week 4

Linguistics week 4. Phonetics 2. Phonetics: the sounds of language. Not language-specific Describes sounds produced in any or all languages Phonology describes the sound patterns in particular languages, like English or Chinese For example This is how to make the sound [p]

annona
Télécharger la présentation

Linguistics week 4

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. Linguistics week 4 Phonetics 2

  2. Phonetics: the sounds of language • Not language-specific • Describes sounds produced in any or all languages • Phonology describes the sound patterns in particular languages, like English or Chinese • For example • This is how to make the sound [p] • The consonant cluster /pr/ is OK in English, not in Chinese

  3. Phones: sound segments • When we know a language, we can segment an utterance into phones • We can do this even though there is no break between phones • Cat has 3 phones • But we don’t say k—a—t • If we don’t know the language, we can’t do this segmentation • It just sounds like one continuous stream of sound • Actually all language is one continuous stream of sound • The tongue (and other moving parts) move gradually • They don’t jump between positions

  4. How many phones? Say them to your neighbor. • Dog? • Rabbit? • Phone • Knot • Comb • China

  5. Two kinds of phone: consonants and vowels • Consonants: air flow from lungs is obstructed in some way (p48) • Vowels: the air flows freely • This is why doctors ask for “aaaahhh” • Vowels are often represented in English spelling by a e i o u • But spelling  pronunciation (p40) • Chinese: • The consonants are ㄅㄆㄇㄈ… • The vowels are ㄚㄛㄜㄝ… (but not always)

  6. Problems with consonant-vowel distinction • Glides (or semivowels) /j/ and /w/ don’t seem to involve much obstruction • but most linguists think of them as consonants (check page 46, Approximants) • ㄦ causes an obstruction, and is thought of as a consonant by linguists • Some of the ㄅㄆㄇ symbols often represent two phones, one consonant and one vowel • Can you say which?

  7. How many vowels? How many consonants? • dog? • rabbit? • phone • knot • comb • China • I • π • pine • long • 餓 • 他 • 龍 • 他們

  8. How many words, morphemes, syllables, consonants and vowels in the following? Count semivowels as consonants. • Greenhouse • Red houses • Women • 我們 • Those sheep • 老鼠 • 老太太 • 玻璃 • John drinks coffee • 他不喝咖啡

  9. Reading for next time • Chapter 5; and • Compare KK 音標 • http://www.ysjh.cy.edu.tw/nineone/eng/phonics/vowel.htm • with the US system used in our book • (tables on pages 45 &48) • write the differences you find in pencil in your book, if you want to

  10. Language presentations • 10-15 minutes • Talk about • Where? Who? How many? • Interesting facts about the language • Relationship with other languages • Sounds of the language • Morphology and syntax (= grammar) • You can use wikipedia and ethnologue to help you • BUT you must consult other websites too • You will get a better grade if you • Consult library books about the language, or about linguistics • Tell us which books and websites you used

  11. Articulatory phonetics • What does that mean? • What are the other two phases of signal transmission, please? • Classification of sounds in articulatory phonetics • First, we’ll look at consonants

  12. Describing (characterizing) consonants • First, airstream: • For all sounds in English and Mandarin, this is pulmonic egressive • Second, place of articulation • Listed in Yule chapter 5 • How would you describe the difference between [f], [θ] and [s]? • How about [p], [t] and [k]? (groups?)

  13. Third, voicing • Voiced and voiceless consonants • [f] and [v] are both bilabial • So what’s the difference? • [v] is voiced • The vocal folds open and close rapidly • (They vibrate) • [f] is voiceless • No vibration

  14. Voiced vs voiceless • Of course [v] does not exist in Mandarin • It does in Shanghai (因為 pronounced yinvei!) • Say both, and put your fingers on your larynx • [b] and [p] are voiced and voiceless respectively • [b] doesn’t exist in Mandarin either • In fact, there are very few voiced consonants in Mandarin

  15. Manner of articulation • Now, consider the difference between • [t] and [s] (these exist in Mandarin) • [d] and [z] (these don’t) • How about [p] and [m] • or [d] and [n]?

  16. Parameters for describing consonants • So far (this is not complete yet) we have • Airstream (usually the same for all consonants) • Place of articulation • Voicing • Manner of articulation • So, [p] is … • egressive pulmonic • bilabial • voiceless • plosive

More Related