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Introduction to Airstream Mechanisms,
     Speech Sounds and Speech Organs
                                                   Phonetics and Phonology




1    Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
Phonetics
    ο‚— Phonetics is the study of the medium of spoken
      language, that is, the production, transmission
      and reception of the sounds of human speech.
    ο‚— Spoken language is produced by the movements
      of the organs of speech.
    ο‚— All human beings have the same organs of
      speech. So, theoretically speaking, every normal
      human being can produce any of the sounds of
      human speech.




2   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
What is Phonetics ?

    ο‚— Study of human speech as a physical
      phenomenon
    ο‚— Articulation
    ο‚— Acoustics
    ο‚— Perception




3   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
Articulatory Phonetics

     Study of how speech sounds are produced by

    ο‚— human vocal apparatus
    ο‚— Anatomy of vocal organs
    ο‚— Air stream Mechanism
    ο‚— Voicing
    ο‚— Articulation




4   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
Bernoulli Effect

    ο‚— Air pumped from the lungs applies pressure on
      closed glottis
    ο‚— High pressure opens vocal cords
    ο‚— High velocity air flow creates low pressure region
      pulling vocal cords together again
    ο‚— Process is repeated, producing vibrations in the
      vocal cords




5   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
6   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
The Organs of Speech
    ο‚— The respiratory system, consisting of the lungs,
      the muscles of the chest, and the wind-pipe
      (trachea)
    ο‚— The phonatory system, formed by the larynx
    ο‚— The articulatory system, consisting of the nose,
      the mouth (including the tongue, the teeth, the
      roof of the mouth, and the lips)




7   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
Organs of Speech


       Respiratory System                  Phonatory System               Articulatory System


    Lungs   Muscles of          Trachea           Pharynx     Lips      Teeth      Roof        Tongue
            the chest                                                              of the
                                        Larynx                                     mouth

                                         Vocal        Teeth    Hard       Soft      Uvula
                                         cords        ridge    palate     palate


                                                              Tip    Blade      Front   Back     Rims
8       Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
The Organs of Speech




9   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
The larynx
     ο‚— The air from the lungs comes through the wind
        pipe or trachea, at the top of which is the larynx.

     ο‚— In the larynx are two vocal cords, which are like a
        pair of lips placed horizontally from front to back.

     ο‚— They are joined in the front, but can be separated
        at the back, and the opening between them is
        called the glottis.



10   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
The roof of the mouth
     ο‚— The roof of the mouth can be subdivided into four
        parts:
         ο‚— the teeth-ridge or the alveolar ridge, i.e., the hard convex
           surface just behind the upper front teeth
         ο‚— the hard palate, i.e., the hard concave surface behind the
           teeth-ridge
         ο‚— the soft palate, i.e., the soft portion behind the hard palate
         ο‚— the uvula, i.e., a small fleshy structure at the end of the soft
           palate




11   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
The Air-Stream Mechanism
     ο‚—    Three types of air-stream mechanism:
          οƒ˜ pulmonic
             οƒ˜ in which the lungs and the respiratory muscles set the
                air-stream in motion
          οƒ˜ glottalic
             οƒ˜ in which the larynx, with the glottis firmly closed, is
                moved up or down to initiate the air-stream
          οƒ˜ Velaric
             οƒ˜ in which the back of the tongue in firm contact with the
                soft palate is pushed forward or pulled back to initiate
                the air-stream




12   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
Pulmonic Sounds

     ο‚— Air flow is directed outwards towards the oral
       cavity
     ο‚— Pressure built by compression of lungs
     ο‚— English [p], [n], [s], [l], [e]




13   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
Glottic Egressive Sounds

     ο‚— Air flow is directed outwards towards the oral
       cavity
     ο‚— Pressure built by pushing up closed glottis
     ο‚— Georgian [p’], [t’], [k’]




14   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
Glottic Ingressive Sounds

     ο‚— Air flow is directed inwards from the oral cavity
     ο‚— Pressure reduced by pulling down closed glottis


     Hausa, Sindhi [Ι“,Ι  ]




15   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
Velaric Sounds

     ο‚— Air flow is directed inwards from the oral cavity
     ο‚— Pressure reduced by forming velaric and alveolar
       closure and pulling down tongue
     ο‚— clicks




16   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
The State of the Glottis
     ο‚— When we breath in and out, the glottis is open.
       That is, the vocal cords are drawn wide apart
       producing voiceless sounds.
     ο‚— If the vocal cords are held loosely together, the
       pressure of the air coming from the lungs makes
       them vibrate; that is, they open and close
       regularly many times a second. Sounds produced
       in this way are called voiced sounds.




17   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
State of the soft palate


               Raised                                               Lowered

     Nasal passage blocked                           Nasal passage open

      Oral sounds produced

                                        Oral passage blocked        Oral passage open
                                        Nasal sounds produced
                                                                Nasalized sounds produced
18    Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
The Articulators
     ο‚— The organs of speech above the glottis are the
        articulators involved in the production of consonants:
         ο‚— Active articulator
            ο‚— the lower lip and the tongue
         ο‚— Passive articulator
            ο‚— the upper lip, the upper teeth, the roof of the mouth and the
               back wall of the throat (or Pharynx).

     ο‚— In the production of a consonant, the active articulator
        is moved towards the passive articulator.




19   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
Consonants and Vowels: Two broad
     categories of sounds
     ο‚—        The description of a consonant includes the
              following description:
          ο‚—      the nature of the air-stream mechanism
                ο‚—    pulmonic / glottalic / velar , egressive / ineggressive
          ο‚—      the state of the glottis
                ο‚—    voiced / voiceless/ whispered
          ο‚—      The position of the velum or the soft palate
          ο‚—      The articulators involved (i.e, the place of articulation)
          ο‚—      The nature of stricture involved (i.e., the manner of
                 articulation)




20   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
The Nature of Stricture Involved-I
     ο‚—     that is, the different ways in which the passage of
           air is restricted in the production of consonants
          ο‚—     Complete closure
                ο‚— The active and the passive articulators making a firm
                  contact with each other, thus preventing the passage of
                  air between them. E.g., /p/, /b/
          ο‚—     Complete oral closure
                ο‚—    The active and passive articulators make a firm contact
                     with each other, thus preventing the passage of air
                     between them, but the soft palate is lowered, thereby
                     allowing the air to escape through the nose. E.g., /m/, /n/




21   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
The Nature of Stricture Involved-
     II
          ο‚—     Intermittent closure
                ο‚—    The air passes between the active and passive
                     articulators intermittently. It involves the vibration of the
                     active articulator against the passive. [Scottish r]
          ο‚—     Flap
                ο‚—    For some consonants the active articulator strikes
                     against the passive articulator once only. /r/ in very
          ο‚—     Close approximation
                ο‚—    The two articulators are brought very close to each
                     other so that the space between them is very narrow.
                     E.g., /f/, /v/, etc.




22   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
The Nature of Stricture Involved-
     III
          ο‚—     Partial closure
                ο‚—    There may be a contact of the articulators in the centre
                     of the vocal tract but the air may pass through the
                     sides. e.g., /l/
          ο‚—     Open approximation
                ο‚—    The two articulators are brought close to each other but
                     the space between them is wide enough for the air to
                     escape without friction. E.g., all vowels and the English
                     /j/ and /w/ as in yes, west.




23   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
The Place of Articulation - I
     ο‚—     The place of articulation simply means the
           active and passive articulators involved in the
           production of a particular consonant.
     ο‚—     A few are:
          ο‚—     Bilabial : The two lips are the articulators. E.g., /p/, /b/, /m/
          ο‚—     Labio-dental: The lower lip is the active articulator and the
                upper teeth are the passive articulators. E.g., /f/, /v/
          ο‚—     Dental: the tip of the tongue is the active articulator and the
                upper front teeth are the passive articulators.




24   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
The Place of Articulation - II
     ο‚—     Alveolar: The tip or blade of the tongue is the active
           articulator and the teeth-ridge is the passive
           articulator.
     ο‚—     Post-alveolar: The tip of the tongue is the active
           articulator and the back of the teeth-ridge is the
           passive articulator.
     ο‚—     Retroflex: the tip of the tongue is the active
           articulator, and it is curled back. The back of the
           teeth-ridge or the hard palate is the passive
           articulator.




25   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
The Place of Articulation - III
     ο‚—     Palato-alveolar: The tip, blade, and front of the
           tongue are the active articulators and the teeth-
           ridge and hard palate are the passive articulators.
     ο‚—     Palatal: The front of the tongue is the active
           articulator and the hard palate is the passive
           articulator.
     ο‚—     Velar. The back of the tongue is the active
           articulator and the soft palate is the passive
           articulator. E.g. /k/, /g/




26   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
The Place of Articulation - IV
     ο‚— Uvular: The rear part of the back of the tongue is the
        active articulator and the uvula is the passive
        articulator. There are no uvular sounds in English.

     ο‚— Glottal: Produced at the glottis. E.g., [h]




27   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
The Manner of Articulation - I
     ο‚—     According to the manner of articulation consonants
           are usually classified as follows:
          ο‚—     Plosive: In the production of a plosive, there is a
                simultaneous oral and nasal closure. The air behind the
                oral closure is compressed and when the active articulator
                is removed suddenly from contact with the passive one, the
                air escapes with an explosion.
          ο‚—     Nasal: A nasal is produced by a stricture of complete oral
                closure, but in this case there is no closure of nasal
                passage. The soft palate is lowered and the air passes
                through the nose.




28   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
The Manner of Articulation - II
     ο‚—     Trill (rolled consonant) The active articulator taps
           several times against the passive articulator (i.e.,
           stricture of intermittent closure). E.g., [r] in horse.
     ο‚—     Flap: For a flap the active articulator strikes against
           the passive articulator once only. E.g., [r] in very.
     ο‚—     Lateral : A lateral consonant is produced by a
           stricture of closure in the centre of the vocal tract ,
           but the air has a free passage on the sides. E.g., /l/.




29   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
The Manner of Articulation - III
     ο‚—     Fricative: In the production of a fricative
           consonant the articulator is one of close
           approximation. The active articulator is brought
           so close to the passive articulator that the
           passage between them is very narrow and the
           air passes through it with audible friction. E.g.,
           /f/, /v/
     ο‚—     Frictionless continuant: [r] in red
     ο‚—     Semi-vowel: /j/, /w/




30   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
Vowels - I
     ο‚— The stricture involved in the production of vowels is
       open approximation.
     ο‚— The active articulators: the front, the back, the centre
       of the tongue
     ο‚— The passive articulators: the hard palate, the soft
       palate, the meeting point of the hard and soft palates
     ο‚— The active articulator is raised towards the passive
       articulator in such a way that there is a sufficient gap
       between the two for the air to escape through the
       mouth without any friction.




31   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
Vowels - II
     ο‚— A vowel is described using a three-term label:
         ο‚— part of the tongue raised (front, centre, back)
         ο‚— the height to which the tongue is raised (close, half-
           close, half-open, open)
         ο‚— the position of the lips (unrounded or rounded)




32   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
Vowels - III
     ο‚— Monophthong: A vowel that does not change its
        quality (also called pure vowels)

     ο‚— Diphthongs: There are some vowels, the quality
        of which is not constant, but changes from one
        vowel to another.




33   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
Periodic Sine Wave




34   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
35   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
Complex periodic waves




36   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
Resonance




37   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
Sound wave




38   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
Acoustic Phonetics




39   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
Source Filter theory FILTER




40   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
Source-Filter Theory : Source




41   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
Source Filter theory




42   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
Spectrograms




43   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
Speech perception




44   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
Phonetic Transcription
     ο‚— In English there is no one-to-one correspondence between
         spelling and pronunciation.
     ο‚—   To overcome this problem a need had been felt to evolve an
         alphabet in which words of any language could be written
         unambiguously.
     ο‚—   One such alphabet that is used extensively by phoneticians all
         over the world is the International Phonetic Alphabet, devised
         by International Phonetic Association.
     ο‚—   It is claimed to have symbols to represent all the sounds that
         exist in the natural languages of the world.
     ο‚—   It is used to transcribe words of any natural language.
     ο‚—   It is based primarily on Roman Alphabet and a set of diacritics.




45   Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
References
     1. http://www.mapsofworld.com/world-language-map.htm
     2. http://www.ling.upenn.edu/courses/Spring_2001/ling001/phonetics.html
     .
          http://www.umanitoba.ca/faculties/arts/linguistics/russell/138/sec5/phona
          tio.htm
     4. http://web.uvic.ca/ling/resources/ipa/
     5.
          http://www.ling.mq.edu.au/speech/phonetics/phonetics/airstream_laryng
          eal /vot.html
     6. http://www.indiana.edu/~hlw/PhonUnits/consonants2.html
     7. http://www.ling.ohio-state.edu/~xflu/201/phonology.pdf
     8. http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/IPA%20in%20Unicode
     9. http://www.ling.upenn.edu/courses/Summer_2003/ling001/lecture4.html
     10.
       http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/International%20Phonetic%20
46    Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
       Alphabet
References
     11. http://www.haskins.yale.edu/Haskins/MISC/ASY/VOWELS/ah.html
     12. http://www.sil.org/mexico/ling/glosario/E005ei-VowelsChart.htm
     13.
       http://people.deas.harvard.edu/~jones/cscie129/nu_lectures/lecture3%2
       0/
     ο‚— formants1.gif
     14.
       http://www.umanitoba.ca/faculties/arts/linguistics/russell/138/sec4/forma
       nts.htm
     15.
       http://www.umanitoba.ca/faculties/arts/linguistics/russell/138/sec4/srcfilt.
       htm
     16. A Course in Phonetics by Peter Ladefoged
     http://hctv.humnet.ucla.edu/departments/linguistics/VowelsandConsonants/
        course/contents.html
47   17. http://web.uvic.ca/ling/resources/ipa/
     Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
     18. Introduction to Phonetics and Phonology by Clark and Yallop

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Pnp lectur 1

  • 1. Introduction to Airstream Mechanisms, Speech Sounds and Speech Organs Phonetics and Phonology 1 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 2. Phonetics ο‚— Phonetics is the study of the medium of spoken language, that is, the production, transmission and reception of the sounds of human speech. ο‚— Spoken language is produced by the movements of the organs of speech. ο‚— All human beings have the same organs of speech. So, theoretically speaking, every normal human being can produce any of the sounds of human speech. 2 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 3. What is Phonetics ? ο‚— Study of human speech as a physical phenomenon ο‚— Articulation ο‚— Acoustics ο‚— Perception 3 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 4. Articulatory Phonetics Study of how speech sounds are produced by ο‚— human vocal apparatus ο‚— Anatomy of vocal organs ο‚— Air stream Mechanism ο‚— Voicing ο‚— Articulation 4 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 5. Bernoulli Effect ο‚— Air pumped from the lungs applies pressure on closed glottis ο‚— High pressure opens vocal cords ο‚— High velocity air flow creates low pressure region pulling vocal cords together again ο‚— Process is repeated, producing vibrations in the vocal cords 5 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 6. 6 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 7. The Organs of Speech ο‚— The respiratory system, consisting of the lungs, the muscles of the chest, and the wind-pipe (trachea) ο‚— The phonatory system, formed by the larynx ο‚— The articulatory system, consisting of the nose, the mouth (including the tongue, the teeth, the roof of the mouth, and the lips) 7 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 8. Organs of Speech Respiratory System Phonatory System Articulatory System Lungs Muscles of Trachea Pharynx Lips Teeth Roof Tongue the chest of the Larynx mouth Vocal Teeth Hard Soft Uvula cords ridge palate palate Tip Blade Front Back Rims 8 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 9. The Organs of Speech 9 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 10. The larynx ο‚— The air from the lungs comes through the wind pipe or trachea, at the top of which is the larynx. ο‚— In the larynx are two vocal cords, which are like a pair of lips placed horizontally from front to back. ο‚— They are joined in the front, but can be separated at the back, and the opening between them is called the glottis. 10 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 11. The roof of the mouth ο‚— The roof of the mouth can be subdivided into four parts: ο‚— the teeth-ridge or the alveolar ridge, i.e., the hard convex surface just behind the upper front teeth ο‚— the hard palate, i.e., the hard concave surface behind the teeth-ridge ο‚— the soft palate, i.e., the soft portion behind the hard palate ο‚— the uvula, i.e., a small fleshy structure at the end of the soft palate 11 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 12. The Air-Stream Mechanism ο‚— Three types of air-stream mechanism: οƒ˜ pulmonic οƒ˜ in which the lungs and the respiratory muscles set the air-stream in motion οƒ˜ glottalic οƒ˜ in which the larynx, with the glottis firmly closed, is moved up or down to initiate the air-stream οƒ˜ Velaric οƒ˜ in which the back of the tongue in firm contact with the soft palate is pushed forward or pulled back to initiate the air-stream 12 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 13. Pulmonic Sounds ο‚— Air flow is directed outwards towards the oral cavity ο‚— Pressure built by compression of lungs ο‚— English [p], [n], [s], [l], [e] 13 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 14. Glottic Egressive Sounds ο‚— Air flow is directed outwards towards the oral cavity ο‚— Pressure built by pushing up closed glottis ο‚— Georgian [p’], [t’], [k’] 14 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 15. Glottic Ingressive Sounds ο‚— Air flow is directed inwards from the oral cavity ο‚— Pressure reduced by pulling down closed glottis Hausa, Sindhi [Ι“,Ι  ] 15 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 16. Velaric Sounds ο‚— Air flow is directed inwards from the oral cavity ο‚— Pressure reduced by forming velaric and alveolar closure and pulling down tongue ο‚— clicks 16 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 17. The State of the Glottis ο‚— When we breath in and out, the glottis is open. That is, the vocal cords are drawn wide apart producing voiceless sounds. ο‚— If the vocal cords are held loosely together, the pressure of the air coming from the lungs makes them vibrate; that is, they open and close regularly many times a second. Sounds produced in this way are called voiced sounds. 17 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 18. State of the soft palate Raised Lowered Nasal passage blocked Nasal passage open Oral sounds produced Oral passage blocked Oral passage open Nasal sounds produced Nasalized sounds produced 18 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 19. The Articulators ο‚— The organs of speech above the glottis are the articulators involved in the production of consonants: ο‚— Active articulator ο‚— the lower lip and the tongue ο‚— Passive articulator ο‚— the upper lip, the upper teeth, the roof of the mouth and the back wall of the throat (or Pharynx). ο‚— In the production of a consonant, the active articulator is moved towards the passive articulator. 19 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 20. Consonants and Vowels: Two broad categories of sounds ο‚— The description of a consonant includes the following description: ο‚— the nature of the air-stream mechanism ο‚— pulmonic / glottalic / velar , egressive / ineggressive ο‚— the state of the glottis ο‚— voiced / voiceless/ whispered ο‚— The position of the velum or the soft palate ο‚— The articulators involved (i.e, the place of articulation) ο‚— The nature of stricture involved (i.e., the manner of articulation) 20 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 21. The Nature of Stricture Involved-I ο‚— that is, the different ways in which the passage of air is restricted in the production of consonants ο‚— Complete closure ο‚— The active and the passive articulators making a firm contact with each other, thus preventing the passage of air between them. E.g., /p/, /b/ ο‚— Complete oral closure ο‚— The active and passive articulators make a firm contact with each other, thus preventing the passage of air between them, but the soft palate is lowered, thereby allowing the air to escape through the nose. E.g., /m/, /n/ 21 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 22. The Nature of Stricture Involved- II ο‚— Intermittent closure ο‚— The air passes between the active and passive articulators intermittently. It involves the vibration of the active articulator against the passive. [Scottish r] ο‚— Flap ο‚— For some consonants the active articulator strikes against the passive articulator once only. /r/ in very ο‚— Close approximation ο‚— The two articulators are brought very close to each other so that the space between them is very narrow. E.g., /f/, /v/, etc. 22 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 23. The Nature of Stricture Involved- III ο‚— Partial closure ο‚— There may be a contact of the articulators in the centre of the vocal tract but the air may pass through the sides. e.g., /l/ ο‚— Open approximation ο‚— The two articulators are brought close to each other but the space between them is wide enough for the air to escape without friction. E.g., all vowels and the English /j/ and /w/ as in yes, west. 23 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 24. The Place of Articulation - I ο‚— The place of articulation simply means the active and passive articulators involved in the production of a particular consonant. ο‚— A few are: ο‚— Bilabial : The two lips are the articulators. E.g., /p/, /b/, /m/ ο‚— Labio-dental: The lower lip is the active articulator and the upper teeth are the passive articulators. E.g., /f/, /v/ ο‚— Dental: the tip of the tongue is the active articulator and the upper front teeth are the passive articulators. 24 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 25. The Place of Articulation - II ο‚— Alveolar: The tip or blade of the tongue is the active articulator and the teeth-ridge is the passive articulator. ο‚— Post-alveolar: The tip of the tongue is the active articulator and the back of the teeth-ridge is the passive articulator. ο‚— Retroflex: the tip of the tongue is the active articulator, and it is curled back. The back of the teeth-ridge or the hard palate is the passive articulator. 25 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 26. The Place of Articulation - III ο‚— Palato-alveolar: The tip, blade, and front of the tongue are the active articulators and the teeth- ridge and hard palate are the passive articulators. ο‚— Palatal: The front of the tongue is the active articulator and the hard palate is the passive articulator. ο‚— Velar. The back of the tongue is the active articulator and the soft palate is the passive articulator. E.g. /k/, /g/ 26 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 27. The Place of Articulation - IV ο‚— Uvular: The rear part of the back of the tongue is the active articulator and the uvula is the passive articulator. There are no uvular sounds in English. ο‚— Glottal: Produced at the glottis. E.g., [h] 27 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 28. The Manner of Articulation - I ο‚— According to the manner of articulation consonants are usually classified as follows: ο‚— Plosive: In the production of a plosive, there is a simultaneous oral and nasal closure. The air behind the oral closure is compressed and when the active articulator is removed suddenly from contact with the passive one, the air escapes with an explosion. ο‚— Nasal: A nasal is produced by a stricture of complete oral closure, but in this case there is no closure of nasal passage. The soft palate is lowered and the air passes through the nose. 28 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 29. The Manner of Articulation - II ο‚— Trill (rolled consonant) The active articulator taps several times against the passive articulator (i.e., stricture of intermittent closure). E.g., [r] in horse. ο‚— Flap: For a flap the active articulator strikes against the passive articulator once only. E.g., [r] in very. ο‚— Lateral : A lateral consonant is produced by a stricture of closure in the centre of the vocal tract , but the air has a free passage on the sides. E.g., /l/. 29 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 30. The Manner of Articulation - III ο‚— Fricative: In the production of a fricative consonant the articulator is one of close approximation. The active articulator is brought so close to the passive articulator that the passage between them is very narrow and the air passes through it with audible friction. E.g., /f/, /v/ ο‚— Frictionless continuant: [r] in red ο‚— Semi-vowel: /j/, /w/ 30 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 31. Vowels - I ο‚— The stricture involved in the production of vowels is open approximation. ο‚— The active articulators: the front, the back, the centre of the tongue ο‚— The passive articulators: the hard palate, the soft palate, the meeting point of the hard and soft palates ο‚— The active articulator is raised towards the passive articulator in such a way that there is a sufficient gap between the two for the air to escape through the mouth without any friction. 31 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 32. Vowels - II ο‚— A vowel is described using a three-term label: ο‚— part of the tongue raised (front, centre, back) ο‚— the height to which the tongue is raised (close, half- close, half-open, open) ο‚— the position of the lips (unrounded or rounded) 32 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 33. Vowels - III ο‚— Monophthong: A vowel that does not change its quality (also called pure vowels) ο‚— Diphthongs: There are some vowels, the quality of which is not constant, but changes from one vowel to another. 33 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 34. Periodic Sine Wave 34 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 35. 35 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 36. Complex periodic waves 36 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 37. Resonance 37 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 38. Sound wave 38 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 39. Acoustic Phonetics 39 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 40. Source Filter theory FILTER 40 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 41. Source-Filter Theory : Source 41 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 42. Source Filter theory 42 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 43. Spectrograms 43 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 44. Speech perception 44 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 45. Phonetic Transcription ο‚— In English there is no one-to-one correspondence between spelling and pronunciation. ο‚— To overcome this problem a need had been felt to evolve an alphabet in which words of any language could be written unambiguously. ο‚— One such alphabet that is used extensively by phoneticians all over the world is the International Phonetic Alphabet, devised by International Phonetic Association. ο‚— It is claimed to have symbols to represent all the sounds that exist in the natural languages of the world. ο‚— It is used to transcribe words of any natural language. ο‚— It is based primarily on Roman Alphabet and a set of diacritics. 45 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan
  • 46. References 1. http://www.mapsofworld.com/world-language-map.htm 2. http://www.ling.upenn.edu/courses/Spring_2001/ling001/phonetics.html . http://www.umanitoba.ca/faculties/arts/linguistics/russell/138/sec5/phona tio.htm 4. http://web.uvic.ca/ling/resources/ipa/ 5. http://www.ling.mq.edu.au/speech/phonetics/phonetics/airstream_laryng eal /vot.html 6. http://www.indiana.edu/~hlw/PhonUnits/consonants2.html 7. http://www.ling.ohio-state.edu/~xflu/201/phonology.pdf 8. http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/IPA%20in%20Unicode 9. http://www.ling.upenn.edu/courses/Summer_2003/ling001/lecture4.html 10. http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/International%20Phonetic%20 46 Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan Alphabet
  • 47. References 11. http://www.haskins.yale.edu/Haskins/MISC/ASY/VOWELS/ah.html 12. http://www.sil.org/mexico/ling/glosario/E005ei-VowelsChart.htm 13. http://people.deas.harvard.edu/~jones/cscie129/nu_lectures/lecture3%2 0/ ο‚— formants1.gif 14. http://www.umanitoba.ca/faculties/arts/linguistics/russell/138/sec4/forma nts.htm 15. http://www.umanitoba.ca/faculties/arts/linguistics/russell/138/sec4/srcfilt. htm 16. A Course in Phonetics by Peter Ladefoged http://hctv.humnet.ucla.edu/departments/linguistics/VowelsandConsonants/ course/contents.html 47 17. http://web.uvic.ca/ling/resources/ipa/ Sir Nazir Malik, Professor at UMT, Pakistan 18. Introduction to Phonetics and Phonology by Clark and Yallop