LING 2100 UGA Test 1 | Quizlet

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Last updated 11:54 PM on 6/17/26
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88 Terms

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Phonetics

the study of the minimal units of language

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articulatory phonetics

the study of the production of speech sounds

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acoustic phonetics

the study of the transmission and the physical properties of speech sounds

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auditory phonetics

the study of the perception of speech sounds

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x-ray photography

X-rays used in conjunction with sound film. The use of this technique can reveal the details of the functioning of the vocal apparatus. The entirety of how a sound is produced is revealed and can actually be seen as it happens.

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palatography

Experimental method that shows the contact between the tongue and the roof of the mouth. Can be static or dynamic.

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sound spectrograph

equipment that generates spectrograms from speech input

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impressionistic phonetic transcription

a method of writing down speech sounds in order to capture what is said and how it is pronounced

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phone

sound

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Co-articulation

The adjustment of articulation of a segment due to the influence of a neighboring sound(s)

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segments

the individual units of the speech stream; segments can be further subdivided into consonants and vowels

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Suprasegmentals

A phonetic characteristic of speech sounds, such as length, intonation, tone, or stress, that "rides on top of" segmental features. Must usually be identified by comparison to the same feature on other sounds or strings of sounds.

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consonants

Speech sound produced with a constriction somewhere in the vocal tract that impedes airflow

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vowel

speech sound produced with at most only a slight narrowing somewhere in the vocal tract, allowing air to flow freely through the oral cavity

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syllable

a unit of speech, made up of an onset and rhyme

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monosyllabic

having only one syllable

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onset

in a syllable, any consonants that occur before the rhyme

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rhyme

in a syllable, a vowel and any consonants that follow it

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nucleus

the vocalic part of rhyme

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coda

consists of any final consonants

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monopthongs

simple vowels composed of a single configuration of the vocal tract

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diphthong

a complex vowel, composed of a sequence of two different configurations of the vocal organs

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running speech/continuous speech

the usual form of spoken language, with all the words and phrases run together, without pauses in between them

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articulatory description

the description of the motion or positioning of the parts of the vocal tract that are responsible for the production of a speech sound

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articulation/articulatory gesture

the motion or positioning of some part of the vocal tract with respect to some other part of the vocal tract in the production of a speech sound

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segmental features

voicing, place, and manner of articulation

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speech sounds

represent physical sound realities; they are end products of articulatory motor processes

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Larynx

cartilage and muscle located at the top of the trachea, containing the vocal folds and the glottis (voice box)

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vocal tract

the entire air passage above the larynx, consisting of the pharynx, oral cavity, and nasal cavity

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sub-glottal system

part of the respiratory system located below the larynx

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pulmonic egressive airstream mechanism

airstream mechanism that produces speech sounds by modifying the stream of air forced out of the lungs and passed through the oral and/or nasal cavities

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Trachea

windpipe; tube through which air moves

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vocal folds

folds of muscle in the larynx responsible for creating voiced sounds when they vibrate

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glottis

space between the vocal folds

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Voicing

vibration of the vocal folds

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voiced

sounds made by vibrations of vocal folds

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voiceless

a sound produced without vocal fold vibration

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Spectrogram

a three-dimensional representation of sound in which the vertical axis represents frequency, the horizontal axis represents time, and the darkness of shading represents amplitude

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voicing bar

the dark band at the bottom of a spectrogram that indicates that a sound is voiced

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place of articulation

the place in the vocal tract where the constriction for the production of a consonant is made

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sagittal section

a cross section of the human head, designed to show a side view of the vocal anatomy

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bilabial

consonants are made by bringing both lips closer together

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labiodental

consonants are made with the lower lip against the upper front teeth

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interdental

tip of the tongue protruding between the front teeth

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alveolar

sounds are made with the tongue tip at or near the front of the upper alveolar ridge

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alveolar ridge

the gum ridge behind the upper teeth

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post-alveolar

Sound produced by raising the tongue toward the front part of the palate, just behind the alveolar ridge.

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Palatal

sounds made with the body of the tongue near the center of the hard palate

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velar

consonants produced at the velum

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glottal

sounds are produced when air is contracted at the larynx

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manner of articulation

how the airstream is modified by the articulators in the vocal tract to produce the consonant

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stops/plosives

sounds made by obstruction the airstream completely in the oral cavity

p,b,t,d,k,g,?

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fricatives

made by forming a nearly complete obstruction of the vocal tract

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frication

A turbulent, hissing mouth noise that is produced by forming a nearly complete obstruction of the vocal tract.

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Affricatives

produced by briefly stopping air and then releasing it with some friction

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Nasals

produced by relaxing the velum and lowering it

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Approximants

a consonant, involving constriction of the vocal tract but they're not narrow enough to block the vocal tract or cause turbulence

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Liquids

formed with slightly more constriction than glides and their quality changes depending on whether they occur in a word

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retroflex

curling the tip of the tongue back behind the alveolar ridge

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syllabic consonants

a consonant that serves as the nucleus of a syllable and takes on the role of a vowel in that word

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Glides

made with only a slight closure of the articulators

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flap

a sounds produced by bringing two articulators together very quickly

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static palatography

method which involves painting the tongue to see where it makes contact with teeth

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dynamic palatography

method which allows a series of tongue-teeth contacts to be recorded

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low vowel

an articulation where the tongue is held at a relatively low area of the oral cavity

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high vowel

an articulation in which the tongue is held at a relatively high area of the oral cavity

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nasalized vowels

vowel produced while lowering the velum to allow air to pass through the nasal cavity

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uvula

small fleshy mass hanging from back of the throat used to produce uvular consonants

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Pharynx

throat (below the uvula but above the larynx)

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Trill

a sound produced by bringing two articulators together in a series of quick taps

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palatalized

a term used to describe the articulation of a sound which involves the tongue moving toward the hard palate

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clear vs dark

tongue body down, tongue tip-up vs. opposite

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velarized

describes articulation of sound by moving tongue toward velum

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glottalization

The production of a speech sound with creaky voice or with a simultaneous glottal stop.

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ejective

sound produced by glottalization

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length

the duration of a segment

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intonation

the patter of pitch movements across a stretch of speech such as a sentence

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pitch accents

involve a change in fundamental frequency in the middle of an utterance

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phrase tones

a change in fundamental frequency at the end of a phrase, for example, to indicate a question or statement or to group words into a linguistic unit

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Tone

the pitch at which syllables in a word are pronounced that can make a difference in the meaning

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stress

a property of syllables; a stressed syllable is more prominent than an unstressed one due to having greater soundness, longer duration, different pitch, or full vowels

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Compression

where the particles are close together in sound wave

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rarefaction

a part in a longitudinal wave where the particles are spread apart

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periodic wave

sound waves that REPEAT themselves at regular intervals

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Harmonics

multiples of the fundamental frequency

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fundamental frequency

rate at which the vocal folds vibrate during voicing

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formants

resonant frequencies of the vocal tract

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aspiration

when air rushes out of the mouth after the release of the stop closure and before the onset of the vowel