Lecture 10
English consonants: realization/allophonic variation contd
Solving potential pronunciation problems
Intonation: analysing the use & meaning of intonation patterns
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SI! 8.1-2
CEI 6.2
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English consonants: realization/allophonic variation
Important to note:
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Allophones concern the precise, phonetic realization of phonemes according to phonological surroundings. (Complementary distribution)
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Allophonic variation is often a result of phonetic assimilation, i.e. neighbouring phonemes become more similar to each other.
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Different allophones are not marked in a phonemic transcription.
Different realizations of the same phoneme can vary with respect to
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voicing
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aspiration
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place of articulation
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manner of articulation
Variations in place of articulation
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The alveolar sounds /t, d, n, l/ are articulated as dental before the dental fricatives // and //.
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/t/ and /d/ become postalveolar in front of the postalveolar /r/
tea / tree, do, drew
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The articulation of the velar sounds /k, g, / varies with neighbouring vowels:
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near a front vowel: contact between the tongue and the velum is made further front (pre-velar)
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near a central vowel: velar
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near a back vowel: contact between the tongue and the velum is made further back
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Clear and dark allophones of /l/ (RP)
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The clear allophone (with the front of the tongue raised) occurs before vowels and /j/ (lake, failure)
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The dark allophone (with the back of the tongue raised) occurs before consonants and word-finally (melt, fail)
Variations in manner of articulation
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The frictionless continuant /r/ is articulated as a fricative after /t/ and /d/ (try, dry)
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The frictionless continuants /j/ and /w/ become fricatives (and voiceless) when they combine with /h/ (huge, which)
The release of plosives
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Normally, the plosives have oral plosion, i.e. the air is released through the mouth, with no obstruction.
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Nasal release (i.e. the air is released through the nose) occurs when the plosive is followed by a homorganic nasal (i.e. /p, b/ followed by /m/, /t, d/ followed by /n/, /k, g/ followed by // (happen, button, bacon)
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Lateral release (i.e. the air is released along the sides of the tongue) occurs when the alveolar plosives /t, d/ are followed by /l/ (little, middle)
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Inaudible release (unexploded stop) occurs when the plosive is followed by another stop. (suit – suitcase)
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Aspiration usually follows the release of the fortis plosives /p, t, k/. The aspiration disappears if the plosive is preceded by /s/ (within the same syllable) (key vs. ski)
English consonants – Solving potential pronunciation problems
Pronunciation problems arise because
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English has phonemes that Norwegian doesn’t have (differences in phonemic inventory).
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A Norwegian learner will have to learn how to pronounce the “new” phonemes and how to distinguish them from other, similar phonemes
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English phonemes are articulated in a (slightly) different way from corresponding Norwegian phonemes
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A Norwegian learner will be understood, but sound foreign, unless the precise articulation is learnt
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An English phoneme may have a different distribution from its Norwegian counterpart
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A Norwegian learner may need to learn to articulate a phoneme in an “unusual” position.
Differences in inventory (RP/GA vs. Standard Eastern Norwegian)
English affricates //, //
The fortis fricative //
The lenis fricatives /, , , /
The semi-vowel /w/
Examples on handout.
Distinguishing similar phonemes
, (thought vs. taught)
Dental fricatives vs. alveolar plosives (dental in Norwegian)
, (they vs. day)
More examples on handout
v, w (veil vs. whale)
Labiodental lenis fricative (‘bite your lip’) vs. Labiovelar open approximant (rounded lips, no friction)
More examples on handout
Differences in place / manner of articulation
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/v/ has audible friction in English
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/t, d, n/ are apico-alveolar (apico-dental in Norwegian)
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all allophones of /r/ are unlike the /r/-sounds in Eastern Norwegian
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/l/ is always dark in GA and clear and dark /l/ are allophones in RP, with a different distribution from allophones of the Norwegian /l/
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/k, g, / are articulated at the back of the velum after back vowels in English but not in Norwegian. (rock vs. råk)
Differences in distribution
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The distribution of /r/ in RP (and other non-rhotic accents)
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/v/ does not occur after other consonants in initial clusters (but /w/ does)
cp. Norwegian svett, tvinne, kvinne; English sweat, twin, queen
Analysing intonation patterns
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The intonation pattern itself: (prehead) – (head) – NUCLEUS – (tail)
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The sentence type (declarative, interrogative, imperative, sentence fragment)
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The context (i.e speaker A’s utterance + the actual words used. It is also possible to imagine a wider context, but don’t be too creative!)
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The communicative function: statement, question, command, offer, request, apology, suggestion, etc.
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The attitudinal meaning of speaker B: e.g. lively, involved, neutral, calm, interested, casual, cheerful, hostile, annoyed…
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The accent-placing: Note if accent placing differs, the emphasis of the two utterances may be different – or even the meaning of words and phrases (see further Unit 7).
A conversation for analysis
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I’ve got a feeling we’ve met be\fore
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It’s Margaret \Johnson, | /isn’t it
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Do you re member /my name
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Let me \think for a minute
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/Yes, | Michael \Hughes
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What a sur \prise
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What are you /doing | back in \London
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