General phonetics (presentation Phonetics as a scientific study of speech)
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Characterize speech communication according to the semiotic framework (slides 4-6).
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Give a brief characteristic of the three subfields of phonetics (slide 7).
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What types of information are conveyed in speech? Name them and describe one of them in a greater detail (slides 8-10)
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What distinguishes vocal from non-vocal behaviour? (slide 11, Phonetics as a scientific study of speech)
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Explain the difference between verbal and non-verbal communication (slide 12).
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Why speech sounds are considered as arbitrary signs? (slides 13-15)
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Explain how listeners perform reconstitution of the intended message from partial clues? (slides 16-17)
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Describe the relation between speech sounds and phonemes (slides 17-18).
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What kind of information is conveyed by paralinguistic and extralinguistic communication? (slides 21-23)
Articulatory phonetics (presentation The Vocal Tract and Initiation of Speech, +tables)
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Describe the parts of the tongue that take active part in the articulation of various speech sounds.
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Describe briefly and give examples of labial, coronal and dorsal articulations. (slides 7-11)
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Name the manners of articulation in the production of consonantal sounds. (slides 12-16)
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Explain the manner of articulation of a selected type of a sound (a fricative, a glide, a vowel etc.).
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What kind of features are significant in the classification of consonantal sounds? (slide 19)
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Describe the articulatory features which are significant in the production of vowels. (slides 17-19)
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What kind of information concerning articulation does the vowel chart provide? (slides 17-18)
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Explain the difference between vowels and consonants. (slide 20)
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Why features which refer to variation in stress, pitch and length are called suprasegmental? (slide 21)
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Give at least three functions of stress (slide 23)
(presentation Airstream mechanisms and phonation types, +tables)
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Provide general classification of airstream mechanisms that are applied in various languages of the world. (slide 3)
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Which airstream mechanism is basic to speech production and why? (slides 4-5)
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Describe briefly the differences in the activity of the repiratory system during breathing and speech (slide 6).
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Explain basic features of sounds produced using glottalic AM (slides 8-11).
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What is characteristic about the velaric AM? (slide 12)
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Describe the activity of the glottis in different phonation modes. (slides 15-20)
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Which of the possible phonation types is the most commonly and which is the most rarely used for phonological distinctions? (slides 15-20)
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What does the term voice onset time refer to? (slide 21)
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Describe the difference in the production of aspirated vs. unaspirated voiceless stops. (slide 21)
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How can a fully voiced stop become partly devoiced? (slide 21)
Elements of acoustic phonetics (handout)
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What does the term frequency refer to and describe how it is measured. (section 1.2, page 3)
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Name the possible courses of acoustic vibrations and give examples of sounds of which they are characteristic. (section 1.4, page 3-4)
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Give a short definition of the terms: pitch, loudness and quality. (section 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, page 5-6)
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What is depicted on a waveform? (section 3.1, page 6)
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Define the term formant. How are formants depicted on a spectrogram? (section 3.2, page 6)
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Describe the relation between the changes in the frequency of the first and second formant and vowel quality. (section 3.3.1, page 7)
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How can oral stops, fricatives and glides be identified on the spectrogram? (section 3.4.1, page 8; sec. 3.4.5 p.12-13, sec. 3.4.6 p. 13-15)
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Describe the effect of nasality on the acoustic structure of a sound. (section 3.4.2, page 9)
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Describe the acoustic features of sounds that provide information on their place of articulation. (sec. 3.4, p. 8)
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Explain the relation between the place of articulation and frequency of the fricative noise in the production of fricatives. (sec. 3.4.6, p.13-14)
Vowels in general and Polish vowels (handout)
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Classify vowels with respect to tongue position. (sec. 1, figure 1)
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Explain the terms cardinal vowels and secondary cardinal vowels (sec. 1 and 1.1)
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Describe the relation between the number of vowels and the number of consonants in a language (sec. 3.2)
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How the tendency to form patterns affects the choice of vowels in a language? (sec. 3.2)
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Describe the relation between vowel backness and lip rounding (sec. 4.1, p. 5-6)
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Explain the difference between nasal and nasalized vowels (4.2.1, p.6-7)
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Describe the chart of Polish vowels (classify sec. 5.1.1, p. 9-10)
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Classify Polish vowels according to lip rounding (sec. 5.4, p.12)
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How are Polish nasal vowels realized? (sec. 4.2.2 p.8)
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Describe the phonetic mapping of the graphemes [ą] and [ę] (sec. 7, p.16)
Polish consonants (handout)
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Describe the stages in the articulation of stops. (sec. 2.1, p.2)
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Give the general articulatory characteristic of palatalization and describe context in which it occurs.
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Describe briefly the articulation of fricatives and classify them according to the place of articulation. (sec. 4.1, p.6)
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Explain the difference in the articulation of sequences of a plosive+fricative and affricates. (sec. 5.1, p.12)
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Explain the difference in the articulation of nasal and oral stops, and classify Polish nasal stops according to the place of articulation. (sec. 6.1, p.15)
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Describe briefly the articulation of Polish liquids: lateral /l/ and trill /r/. (sec. 7.1 and 7.2, p. 17-18)
In the exam you can also be asked to classify Polish consonants according to place and/or manner of articulation, so please study the tables from the website! (link: Articulatory phonetics: Vowels and consonants)
Assimilation (handout)
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Explain the difference between progressive and regressive assimilation and give examples. (sec. 1.2)
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Give examples of a progressive voicing and devoicing that occur within word boundaries (intra-word assimilation, sec. 2.2.1, 2.2.2)
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What kind of a process occurs at word boundaries? (sec. 2.2.3)
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What does the term affrication refer to? (sec. 5)
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