phonetics and phonology

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Phonetics and Phonology

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Phonetics and Phonology. What is Phonetics?. H ow speech sounds are produced by the human vocal apparatus. . T he perception of speech sounds. . Transmission and physical properties of speech sounds. . What is Phonology?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Phonetics and  Phonology

Phonetics and

Phonology

Page 2: Phonetics and  Phonology

The study of PRONUNCIATION

consists of two fields:

PHONETICS PHONOLOGY

Page 3: Phonetics and  Phonology

What is Phonetics?Phonetics is the study of

human speech sounds.

Articulatory

phoneticsAcoustic

phonetics Auditory

phonetics How speech sounds are

produced by the human

vocal apparatus.

Transmission and physical

properties of speech sounds.

The perception of speech sounds.

Page 4: Phonetics and  Phonology

WHAT IS PHONOLOGY?• Phonology is how speech sounds are

organized and affect one another in pronunciation.

• It deals with the system and pattern of sounds which exist within a particular language.

• The study of phonology of English looks at the vowels, consonants and suprasegmental features of the language ( stress, intonation)

Page 5: Phonetics and  Phonology

When we talk about vowels and consonants, within the discipline of phonology, we are referring to the different sounds we make when speaking, and NOT the vowel and consonant letters we refer to when talking about spelling.

Page 6: Phonetics and  Phonology

In any language we can identify a small number of regularly used sounds (vowels and consonants) that we call PHONEMES.

A phoneme is the smallest contrastive unit in the sound system of a language.

For Example: PIN PEN PET BET

Phonemes

Page 7: Phonetics and  Phonology

When we speak we produce a CONTINUOUS STREAM OF SOUNDS.

In studying speech we divide this stream into small pieces that we call SEGMENTS.

For Example:

MANm æ n

Page 8: Phonetics and  Phonology

It is not always easy to decide on the number of segments.For Example:

MINE

m aɪ n

Page 9: Phonetics and  Phonology

It is very important to learn to think of English pronunciation in terms of Phonemes rather than letters of the alphabet.

Consider written Englishenough through thorough

thought bough

think those thistle thong

church chemistry lochCheryl

LETTERS AND SOUNDS

Page 10: Phonetics and  Phonology

Special symbols are used to represent speech sounds.

Page 11: Phonetics and  Phonology

What is the difference between phonetics and phonology?

Phonology deals with the sound systems languages

Phonetics deals with the physical realisation of the elements of the sound system, e.g. how the sound is physically produced (articulatory phonetics), or the acoustic characteristics of the speech sound (acoustic phonetics)

Page 12: Phonetics and  Phonology

Segmental and

suprasegmental elements

Phonemes are the different sounds within a language.Although there are slight differences in how individuals articulate sounds, we can still describe reasonably accurately how each sound is produced.

To sum up: Phonemes are units of sound which can be analysed . They are also known as SEGMENTS.

Page 13: Phonetics and  Phonology

SUPRASEGMENTAL FEATURES are features of speech which generally apply to groups of segments, or phonemes.

The features which are important in English are STRESS, INTONATION, and how sounds change in connected speech.

Page 14: Phonetics and  Phonology

Phoneme

Consonants

Voiced Unvoiced

Vowels

Single vowels

Short Long

Diphthongs

Page 15: Phonetics and  Phonology

Suprasegmental Features

Intonation Stress

Word stress

Sentence

stress

Page 16: Phonetics and  Phonology

SYMBOLS AND TRANSCRIPTION

Symbols are for one of two purposes: They are symbols for the phonemes (phonemic or phoneme symbols) They are phonetic symbols

PHONEMIC SYMBOLS The number of phonemic symbols must be exactly the same as the number of phonemes we decide exist in the language.Some of the phonemes symbols consist of two characters as in the word CHIP | tʃɪp |

Page 17: Phonetics and  Phonology

•Phonemic transcription: every speech sound must be identified as one of the phonemes and written with the appropriate symbol. (two kind of transcription: transcription from dictation or transcription from a written text)

•The phonemic system described for RP contains 44 PHONEMES

•The best-known system: The International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA)

Page 18: Phonetics and  Phonology

IPA has been developing since 1888.

The system represents each sound of human speech with a single symbol.

The symbol is enclosed in brackets [ ].

Page 19: Phonetics and  Phonology

Transcription – the art of reducing speech to writing

Remember: a word in isolation may be spoken differently to a word in connected speech

to = [tu:] give it to him = [gɪv ɪt tə ɪm]

compare

Page 20: Phonetics and  Phonology

RP AND OTHER ACCENTS

Languages have different accents; they are pronounced differently by people from different geographical places, from different social classes, of different ages and different educational backgrounds.

Page 21: Phonetics and  Phonology

We use the word DIALECT refers to the variety of a language which is different from others no just in pronunciation but also in such matters as vocabulary, grammar and word order.

ACCENT are pronunciation differences only.

Page 22: Phonetics and  Phonology

The accent that we concentrate on and use as our model is the one that is most often recommended for foreign learners studying British English. It is the accent used by most announcers and newsreaders on serious national and international BBC broadcasting channels. It has for a long time been indentified by the name Received Pronunciation (RP)