Lecture - 10. Phonetics Lecture
Lecture - 10. Phonetics Lecture
Lecturer in English
Dept of Humanities
CUET
natural sounds no systematic meaning
speech sounds
a code system.
The word “ Phone” means sound and “tics”
means scientific or systematic study of
something. So we can say that Phonetics means
scientific or systematic study of human speech
sounds.
Phonetics is general study of all human speech
sounds and how they are produced, transmitted
and received.
The study of phonetics can be divided into three
main branches.
1. Articulatory Phonetics(How sounds are
produced?)
2. Auditory Phonetics(How sounds are received?)
3. Acoustic Phonetics(How sounds are transmitted?)
It is concerned with the positions and movements
of the lips, tongue, and other speech organs in
producing speech. It analyses how the various
speech sounds are articulated by vocal organs.
Auditory Phonetics is the study of hearing and
the perception of speech sounds.
This branch of phonetics is concerned with the
properties of sound waves.
It studies the physical properties of speech
sounds as transmitted between the mouth and ear.
Phonology is a broader study of major speech
sounds and their organization in a particular
language.
↘ nasal cavity
Lips
- they serve for creating different sounds - mainly
the labial, bilabial (e.g. /p/, /b/, /m/, /hw/, and /w/)
and labio-dental consonant sounds (e. g. /f/ and /v/
- and thus create an important part of the speech
apparatus.
Upper Lip
Lower Lip
-
Back
Middle(Dorsum)
Front(Blade)
Tip(Apex)
Alveolar ridge
- hard ridge behind the upper front
teeth. It is between the roof of the
mouth and the upper teeth.
For the sound /s/, air from the lungs passes
continuously through the mouth, but the tongue is
raised sufficiently close to the alveolar ridge (the
section of the upper jaw containing the tooth
sockets) to cause friction as it partially blocks the
air that passes.
Alveolar Ridge
Hard palate
• a thin horizontal bony plate of the skull,
located in the roof of the mouth.
• the interaction between the tongue and the
hard palate is essential in the formation of
certain speech sounds, notably /t/, /d/, and
/j/.
Hard Palate
Velum (soft palate)
- it should have holes forming that function
during speech to separate the oral cavity
(mouth) from the nose, in order to produce the
oral speech sounds. If this separation is
incomplete, air escapes through the nose
during speech and the speech is perceived as
hyper nasal.
Velum or Soft
Palate
Uvula
- it functions in tandem with the
- back of the throat, the palate,
- and air coming up from the lungs to
- create a number of guttural and other sounds.
Soft
Upper Palate
lip Uvula
Lower Back
lip
Middle(Dors
Teeth
um)
Front(Blad
e) (Apex)
Tip
Glottis
Consonants: the sounds in the production of
which there is an obstruction of the air- stream at
some point of the vocal tract .
the onset
the peak
the fall
DAY BEAR
SKY TOUR
BOY GO
BEER COW
a, as in pay ei, as in weigh
as in say as in veil
as in day as in vein
as in way as in reins
as in feigh
o, as in pole oe, as in toe oa, as in coast
as in hole as in roast
as in hoe
as in wrote as in boast
as in woe as in toast
as in whole
as in foe as in toad
as in so
as in vote
ou,
as in soul
as in poultry
I, Ie, Uy,
Hide Tie Buy
Kite Die Guy
Tight Tried
spite Cried
oor, as in poor
Ou, as in tour
Think
That
Ring
Shop
Leisure
Chop
Jump
1. The place of articulation
/l/
Like, life, silly
There are three semi-vowels. These sounds are
phonetically vowels and phonologically consonants.
Phonetically means their mechanism of producing the
sound is same as vowels because there is no
obstruction in flow of air.
But phonologically, they give sounds like consonants.
Fricative f v s z θ ð ʃ ʒ h
Nasal m n ŋ
Affricates tʃ dʒ
Lateral l
Approximant w r j
'lænd əv ‘lɒs ən ‘geɪn | Land of loss and gain
‘fɔ:tju:nz ‘daʊn ðə ‘dreɪn | Fortunes down the drain
‘rɪʧɪz ‘stɪl rɪ’meɪn | Riches still remain
‘ri:’θɪŋk | ‘ri:’treɪn | Rethink, re-train,
‘klaʊdɪə ‘wɪnz ə’geɪn | Claudía wins again.