Sounds of a language: phonetics and phonology
Upcoming - Where and how sounds are produced?
New alphabet
Ex: ff sound - f or ph
Ex 2: Cat v Cereal (c sound is changing)
IPA - international phonetic alphabet
Phonetics - the study of the sounds of human languages
Articulatory phonetics studies the production of sounds
Acoustic phonetics studies the properties of wound waves
Auditory phonetics studies the perception of sounds
How many graphemes are there?
Graphemes - units of writing corresponding to a single sound
Guitar (graphemes = 6 ) (sounds = 5)
The classification is based on the articulatory system
Linguists classify sounds based on 3 parameters
Place (or point) of articulation
Manner of articulation
Activity of the vocal cords: voiced vs voiceless sounds
Place of articulation:
Bilabial sound - sound articulated by the two lips
buh sound
mmm sound
Voice box activation - activating vocal cords so feel the movement (buzzing)
F, s, p, k
Labiodentals - the bottom lip contact with the ridge of the upper teeth
/f/ - ‘fall’, photo
/v/ - very
Dentals - the tip of the tongue makes contact (and sometimes slides in between the teeth)
/Ɵ/ - ‘think’
Aleolars - the tip of the tongue does not make contact with the teeth with area of gum immediately behind the teeth and before the palate
/l/ - lucky
/s/ - sorry
Palatals - the tongue body raises toward the palate
/j/ - young, yesterday
Pre-palats (or post-alveolars) - produced in an area between the alveolar ridge and the palate
// - ship, shirley
/3/ - pleasure (juge sound)
Retroflex - the tongue curled up and back
/r/ - robert, really
Velars - the posterior portion of the tongue makes contact with the velum
/k/ - car
/g/ - go, give
/x/ - hair