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Chapter 4 Vowels

Chapter 4 Vowels. PHONOLOGY (Lane 335). Vowel classification . Vowels are pronounced with open approximation: allowing the airflow to exit unhindered. produced in a smaller area of the vocal tract (the palatal & velar regions) vowels are voiced

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Chapter 4 Vowels

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  1. Chapter 4Vowels PHONOLOGY (Lane 335)

  2. Vowel classification • Vowels are pronounced with open approximation: allowing the airflow to exit unhindered. • produced in a smaller area of the vocal tract (the palatal & velar regions) • vowels are voiced • For all the above, vowels can’t be classified the same way as consonants

  3. Vowel classification • Vowels can be classified by answering three questions • How high is the tongue? • High- mid - low • What part of the tongue is involved? • Front- central- back • What is the position of the lips? • Rounded or unrounded

  4. Vowel classification Other factors: • Vowel length: how long the vowel lasts • Nasality: whether the velum is raised or lowered • Monophthong vs. Diphthong: whether or not the tongue remains in the same position

  5. The Vowel Space • Vowel space establishes the limit of vowel articulation • If the tongue is higher than the highest point, or further back than the furthest back vowel, a consonant is pronounced

  6. Cardinal Vowels • A common way of representing the vowel space is proposed by Daniel Jones in the 1920s

  7. Cardinal Vowels • (1-5) unrounded • (6-8) rounded • doesn’t represent an accurate anatomical diagram of the vowel space • not necessarily the vowels of a particular language

  8. Further classifications • vowel Length indicated by (ː, or doubling symbol); e.g vowel is ‘seat’ is longer than the one in ‘sit’ ([iː] vs. [ɪ]) • Vowel length is not major in distinguishing between vowels in English • monophthongs: vowels that are steady (e.g. see) [iː] • diphthongs: involve tongue movement; (e.g. sigh; low front to high front) ([aɪ]’sky’, [ɔɪ] ‘boy’, [aʊ] ‘cow’, [eɪ] ‘face’) • nasal vowels: with a lowered velum (when precedes a nasal stop); e.g. ‘bean’ • oral vowels: with a raised velum

  9. The vowels of English • much more variation in vowels than in consonants • Vowel variation may have to do with regional or sociolinguistic factors

  10. High front vowels • The long monophthong [iː] as in ‘see’ • The short monophthong [ɪ] as in ‘sit’

  11. Mid front vowels • short mid front: [e], or [ε] as in ‘bed’ • long mid front: [e:] as in ‘day’,

  12. Low front vowels • Short low front: [æ] as in ‘rat’ • Many varieties pronounce this as a lower vowel [a]

  13. Low back vowels • Long low back unrounded [ɑː] as in ‘father’ • Short low back round [ɒ] as in ‘dog’

  14. Mid back vowels • low mid back vowel [ɔː] as in ‘cause’, bought’, ‘door’ • High mid back vowel [oː] as in ‘goat’

  15. High back vowels • High back vowel [uː] as in ‘shoe’ • Low back vowel [ʊ] as in ‘put’

  16. Central vowels • Low mid unround back [ʌ] as in ‘cup’, ‘luck’, ‘fuss’ • Mid central unround [ɜː] as in ‘nurse’, ‘fir’, ‘worse’ • Central vowel schwa [ə] as in ‘about’, ‘puma’: commonest vowel in syllables that don’t carry stress

  17. Distribution • Short vowels may not occur finally in stressed monosyllabic words, while long vowels and diphthongs may ([biː], [bɔɪ], but not *[bɪ] or *[bɒ] • Short vowels only occur in stressed monosyllables when these are consonant final; (bɪt] or [bɒg]

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