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Aspects of Connected Speech (Class 5)

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PH II – IPPI 2020

APRIL, 7th

ASPECTS OF CONNECTED SPEECH (CLASS 5)

1- WATCH THIS VIDEO 


VIDEO AND ANALYSE THE FOLLOWING SET
OF WORDS, WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU PRONOUNCE THEM?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F_1eeh1xlp4

A- THIS ORANGE
B- THAT ORANGE
C- THIS AFTERNOON
D- IS HE BUSY?
E- DO YOU LIKE CATS OR DOGS?
F- HE ASKED
G- SHE ANSWERED
H- DO IT
I- GO OUT
J- SHOE ON
K- NEXT DOOR
L- DAD TAKE ME TO SCHOOL
M- DIAMOND RING
N- MOST COMMON
O- DON’T YOU
P- WON`T YOU
Q- WOULD`T YOU
R- MEET YOU
S- DID YOU
T- SOCIAL LIFE
U- PET TURTLE

2- FROM THE GLOSARY; A LITTLE ENCYCLOPAEDIA OF PHONETICS,


READ THE FOLLOWING CONCEPTS:
A- ASSIMILATON P. 7
assimilation /əˌsɪmɪˈleɪʃə/ n
If speech is thought of as a string of sounds linked together, assimilation is
what happens to a sound when it is influenced by one of its neighbours. For
example, the word ‘this’ has the sound s at the end if it is pronounced on its
own, but when followed by ʃ in a word such as ‘shop’ it often changes in
rapid speech (through assimilation) to ʃ, giving the pronunciation ðɪʃʃɒp.
Assimilation is said to be progressive when a sound influences a following
sound, or regressive when a sound influences one which precedes it; the
most familiar case of regressive assimilation in English is that of alveolar
consonants, such as t, d, s, z, n, which are followed by non-alveolar
consonants: assimilation results in a change of place of articulation from
alveolar to a different place. The example of ‘this shop’ is of this type;
others are ‘football’ (where ‘foot’ fuːt and ‘ball’ bɔːl combine to produce
fuːpbɔːl) and ‘fruit-cake’ (fruːt + keɪk → fruːkkeɪk). Progressive assimilation
is exemplified by the behaviour of the ‘s’ plural ending in English, which is
pronounced with a voiced z after a voiced consonant (e.g. ‘dogs’ dɒɡz) but
with a voiceless s after a voiceless consonant (e.g. ‘cats’ kæts).

B- ELISION P. 28
elision /ɪˈlɪʒə/ n
Some of the sounds that are heard if words are pronounced slowly and
clearly appear not to be pronounced when the same words are produced in
a rapid, colloquial style, or when the words occur in a different context;
these “missing sounds” are said to have been elided. It is easy to find
examples of elision, but very difficult to state rules that govern which
sounds may be elided and which may not. Elision of vowels in English
usually happens when a short, unstressed vowel occurs between voiceless
consonants, e.g. in the first syllable of ‘perhaps’, ‘potato’, the second
syllable of ‘bicycle’, or the third syllable of ‘philosophy’. In some cases we
find a weak voiceless sound in place of the normally voiced vowel that
would have been expected. Elision also occurs when a vowel occurs
between an obstruent consonant and a sonorant consonant such as a nasal
or a lateral: this process leads to syllabic consonants, as in ‘sudden’ /sʌdn̩ /,
‘awful’ /ɔːfl/ (where a vowel is only heard ̩ in the second syllable in slow,
careful speech). Elision of consonants in English happens most commonly
when a speaker “simplifies” a complex consonant cluster: ‘acts’ becomes
æks rather than ækts, ‘twelfth night’ becomes twelθnaɪt or twelfnaɪt rather
than twelfθnaɪt. It seems much less likely that any of the other consonants
could be left out: the l and the n seem to be unelidable. It is very important
to note that sounds do not simply “disappear” like a light being switched
off. A transcription such as æks for ‘acts’ implies that the t phoneme has
dropped out altogether, but detailed examination of speech shows that
such effects are more gradual: in slow speech the t may be fully
pronounced, with an audible transition from the preceding k and to the
following s, while in a more rapid style it may be articulated but not given
any audible realisation, and in very rapid speech it may be observable, if at
all, only as a rather early movement of the tongue blade towards the s
position. Much more research in this area is needed (not only on English)
for us to understand what processes are involved when speech is “reduced”
in rapid articulation.

C- LIAISON LINKING P. 53
liaison /liˈeɪzə n/
“Linking” or “joining together” of sounds is what this French word refers to.
In general this is not something that speakers need to do anything active
about – we produce the phonemes that belong to the words we are using in
a more or less continuous stream, and the listener recognises them (or
most of them) and receives the message. However, phoneticians have felt it
necessary in some cases to draw attention to the way the end of one word
is joined on to the beginning of the following word. In English the best-
known case of liaison is the “linking r”: there are many words in English (e.g.
‘car’, ‘here’, ‘tyre’) which in a rhotic accent such as General American or
Scots would be pronounced with a final r but which in BBC pronunciation
end in a vowel when they are pronounced before a pause or before a
consonant. When they are followed by a vowel, BBC speakers pronounce r
at the end (e.g. ‘the car is’ ðə kɑːr ɪz) – it is said that this is done to link the
words without sliding the two vowels together (though it is difficult to see
how such a statement could stand as an explanation of the phenomenon –
lots of languages do run vowels together). Another aspect of liaison in
English is the movement of a single consonant at the end of an unstressed
word to the beginning of the next if that is strongly stressed: a well-known
example is ‘not at all’, where the t of ‘at’ becomes initial (and therefore
strongly aspirated) in the final syllable for many speakers.

D- RHYTHM P. 76
rhythm /ˈrɪðəm/
Speech is perceived as a sequence of events in time, and the word rhythm
is used to refer to the way events are distributed in time. Obvious examples
of vocal rhythms are chanting as part of games (for example, children
calling words while skipping, or football crowds calling their team’s name)
or in connection with work (e.g. sailors’ chants used to synchronise the
pulling on an anchor rope). In conversational speech the rhythms are vastly
more complicated, but it is clear that the timing of speech is not random.
An extreme view (though a quite common one) is that English speech has a
rhythm that allows us to divide it up into more or less equal intervals of
time called feet, each of which begins with a stressed syllable: this is called
the stress-timed rhythm hypothesis. Languages where the length of each
syllable remains more or less the same as that of its neighbours whether or
not it is stressed are called syllable-timed. Most evidence from the study of
real speech suggests that such rhythms only exist in very careful, controlled
speaking, but it appears from psychological research that listeners’ brains
tend to hear timing regularities even where there is little or no physical
regularity.

E- CONNECTED SPEECH P. 18
F- connected speech /kəˌnektɪd ˈspiːʧ/
A lot of phonetic description is based on examination of small, isolated
pieces of spoken material such as syllables and words. However, it is
necessary to look also at how these small components are pronounced
when a person is speaking naturally and producing continuous speech. The
pronunciation of an item of speech is often modified by factors such as
rhythm, assimilation (or coarticulation), elision and linking, as well as by
speaking rate (tempo) and situational factors such as the amount of
background noise. The study of connected speech is therefore a very
important part of phonetics.

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