UE103 Phonologie & Phonétique de l’anglais, cm1, autumn 2006, Alice Henderson



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UE103 Phonologie & Phonétique de l’anglais, CM1, autumn 2006, Alice Henderson








Welcome to 2nd half of this lecture.
I hope that you found the lectures by JPG interesting and that they will help you to understand mine.



To give you an idea of where we’re going, here is an overview.

Total of 5 lectures.

Today there’ll be a short introduction.

Then, dive into the phonemes- the smallest unities of human sounds.

We’ll look at thee sounds in context in Lecture 2, because the context that a phoneme occurs in has a rather important impact on the phoneme.

For example, we saw in class that the word AND is not pronounced in the same way when you say “Tom and Anne” and “Tom and Bob”

Lecture 3 looks at two concepts which are often mixed up (stress & accent) and rhythm. Rhythm is obvious … but we’ll look at how English rhythm is so different to French rhythm.

After these concepts, we’ll look at intonation.

Intonation is, with rhythm, perhaps the most noticeable feature of spoken English. It is only music after all, and humans are sensitive to music.

However, in English we do use intonation differently so Lecture 4 will look at the tunes of English in more detail.

The last lecture is a sort of review and an extension into the study of the many varieties of English.

You all know that there are now more non-native speakers of English than native speakers in the world, and this is a rather unique historical position for a language to be in.

Every week there will be handouts and I will give you short exercises to do during the lecture- to help you understand what I’m saying & to keep you awake.

TAKGIN NOTES: the CMs will all be on the Web a week after the CM, so … just note down the number of the slide and your comments.





Today we’ll look at some fundamentals.

I’ll explain the IPA.


A few generalities about spoken French and spoken English.

The bibliography is a shortened version of the bibliography on the hand-out.





WHY this lecture?



WHY phonology? Why phonetics?



Difference between phonetics & phonology?

PHONETICS = study of sounds, the nature of sounds, their production

Specialists interested in the description of sounds humans produce.

Work = simple, concrete





PHONOLOGY= study of the system of sounds

More abstract than phonetics

Specialists interested in the interactiosn between sounds, how sounds function together in a language.

Phonetician= study the way a sound is articulated or the existence of a sound over time or in different populations. Compare Scottish “wh” with English “w”, OR interested in the different ways “t” is pronounced: Tom, mat, matter BUT kitten (glottal stop).

Phonologist= study restrictions/legal combinations of consonants. For example, NO English word begins with “zbf” or “ng”.

So easy to see that we’ll move rapidly from phonetics to phonology. Why? = more useful for you to know things about the interactions which are possible and/or probable, more useful than knowing lots of detail about how sounds are articulated.

== why the lecture is called phonetics AND phonology




Start with phonetics … but WHICH phonetics?



Which tools for descriptive phonetics?



General Outline

IPA: three letters referring to 2 things:



    1. the table on your photocopy, the “IPA Chart”

    2. the International Phonetics Association



First, the Association.

The present name dates from 1897.

1886: group of language teachers in Paris. Wanted to encourage the use of a phonetic system of symbols to help children to learn to read better/more quickly.

1914= 1751 members in 40 countries

WWI seriously decimated the ranks (radio silence 1914-1922)

Since then, promotes the study of phonetics and its various applications to science and teaching.

Their major contribution is the phonetic alphabet.


  • today’s missionaries

  • Cherokee alphabet- another writing system for an “oral” language

The official alphabet used by linguists around the world, to represent the variety of sounds that human beings are capable of making.

REFER TO PHOTOCOPY

Most of the symbols come from the Roman alphabet, some from Greek and others …. look like nothing that already exists.

Instead of creating an alphabet for each language, use ONE symbol for same sound

Almost 200 symbols to cover the sounds encountered in the world’s languages

== covers ALL of the sounds that the human articulatory apparatus is capable of producing

EMPTY boxes= no example for this sound, constantly being updated as discovered

BLACK boxes= physically impossible to produce





Basic terminology

Consonants= the air is obstructed as it flows from the larynx to the lips

Vowels= no obstacle to air flow but the space is “shaped” by articulators (tongue, lips, etc.)

http://www.umanitoba.ca/faculties/arts/linguistics/russell/138/sec1/anatomy.htm

Simplifié mais très clair, très concis.

Extremely detailed articulatory diagram: http://alis.isoc.org/glossaire/phonetique.htm

PHOTOCOPY= Anatomy of vocal tract




Understanding the chart: basic categories on the page



Top box = pulmonic consonants

Horizontal axis & Vertical axis = possible to label sounds, describe them

****USEFUL if you want to teach a language, to be able to reliably describe how a sound is produced AND to understand how the other langauge produces a similar sound
http://www.ling.hf.ntnu.no/ipa/full/ipachart_cons_pulm_fbmp3.html
Vertical= the space between the articulators becomes gradually more & more open


  • nasals & pplosives= total closure

  • fricatives= a narrow space

  • approximants= open or almost

Nasals: WHY all on the right side of their boxes? = all voiced

TRY to make a nasal sound without vibrating vocal chords in the larynx

TRY making all the fricatives

Other sounds you know



  • “upisde down “r”’ = English ‘r’

  • Welsh “l” (voiced and unvoiced)

  • X= German loch, kuchen

  • C with a tail = German ich, milch



Terminology, PHOTOCOPY drawing of vocal tract, Latin terms



Non-pulmonic consonants : The air does NOT come from the lungs= IS possible!!

Clicks: kiss/ tut-tut/ cloppy hooves/ cracking gum bubbles/ gee-up OR sthg saucy

Voiced & unvoiced … and nasalized!!

Ejectives= Irish English

Excellent sound files for these sounds: http://www.ling.hf.ntnu.no/ipa/full/ipachart_cons_non_fbmp3.html




UCL Web TUTOR: Stages of Plosive Production

Three stages:



  1. approach stage= the active articulator (the one that moves) is approaching the passive articulator (the one that stays where it is)

  2. hold/compression stage= the two articulators in firm contact, air pressure rises in vocal tract

  3. release stage= the active articulator breaks contact with the passive articulator and moves away. the compressed air is released with an explosive “pop”

GIVE TIME TO DO EXERCISES on photocopy, at least 8.1 & 8.2



ANSWERS 8.1, 8.2, 8.4



Understanding the IPA Chart: Overview slide



http://www.ling.hf.ntnu.no/ipa/full/ipachart_vowels_fbmp3.html

Cardinal Vowels, another system of reference

To simplify the description, classification and comparison of vowels humans make.

Traditional vowel chart, a side-cut of the oral cavity

Vertical axis= aperture or opening of the cavity

Horizontal axis= relative position in the cavity

Vowels are at the furthest points and may seem exagerrated.

These represent the edges of the map (“Beyond, there be dragons”)

And it is like a map of an area you like, because that map is only useful if it covers the ENTIRE area. In doing so, it will also include parts of that area that don’t interest you, where you will never go. NOnetheless, it’s useful to know where the edges are.

NONE of these symbols represent exctaly English vowels, but I can use the chart to describe the Englihs sound” cat” = not quite as open as Cardinal Vowel n°4

Pairs of sounds: rounded lips on the right, spread lips on the left

FRENCH KISS: Luke/Luc

Try it …









Other symbols

“upside down Scottish w”= where – wear are not homonyms

Alveolo-palatal friucatives = Polish siadac/zieba

The two Englisha affricates chucrh/judge NOT here: WHY? == tie bar to link 2 symbols

The chart is basic and simple, often need to link two sounds to describe a sound properly

http://www.ling.hf.ntnu.no/ipa/full/ipachart_other_fbmp3.html




Diacritics: you know more than you think

http://www.ling.hf.ntnu.no/ipa/full/ipachart_diacr_fbmp3.html





Supra-segmentals

Segmentals = individual phonemes

Supras= overriding features

Word stress, length of vowels

Accent: http://www.ling.hf.ntnu.no/ipa/full/ipachart_supra_fbmp3.html

Intonation: http://www.ling.hf.ntnu.no/ipa/full/ipachart_tones_fbmp3.html





Summary of the IPA Chart



Lecture Overview



Spoken French



Spoken English

24 consonants in most types of spoken English





Compare French & English

CASSETTE: SARKOZY





Spoken English: Consonants

http://www.uoregon.edu/~l150web/conson.html





Spoken English: Vowels

Excellent site: RP British monopthongs relatives aux voyelles cardinales http://www.ling.mq.edu.au/units/ling210901/phonetics/vowelgraphs/RPE_Monophthongs.html






Nowhere is the English spelling system more bizarre than in its representation of diphthongs

If one has a clear idea of where pure vowels are articulated on the quadrilateral then interpreting the diphthong symbols is not difficult.

**Diphthongs are the element in a language which are most liable to change. The majority of the characteristics of a given accent are usually to be found in this area, so understanding of the underlying mechanics is vital if one wants to understand accents and accent change.
Technically, English diphthongs are divided into two groups:

5 Closing diphthongs (non-centring) – which tend to move from an open to a close position, these roughly correspond to Italian sounds

**When we say “non-centring” we mean ...CLICK on “fermantes”

3 Centring diphthongs – which tend towards a central position First we will look at the 5 closing (or non-centraing) group…

… the ‘pay’, ‘ made’, ‘maid’, ‘reign’, ‘obey’, sound:

Then we have the ‘I’, ‘my’, ‘tie’, ‘sigh’, ‘either’, ‘eye’, ‘Thai’, sound:

Then there is ‘boy’, ‘choice’:

Then ‘down’, ‘loud’:

To end the closing group, the most common diphthong in English, that of ‘no’, ‘know’,‘bone’, ‘foam’, ‘sew’, ‘though’, ‘don’t’, ‘foe’, ‘crow’:
To start with the centring group, we have the most common, that of ‘clear’, ‘deer’, ‘here’, ‘wier’:

Then ‘air’, ‘where’, wear’, ‘care’, ‘heir’:

Finally, there is a diphthong which is quite rare and is often realised as /O:/ - ‘tour’, ‘poor’:
REMEMBER:

Although the symbols indicating pure vowels and the starting and closing points of diphthongs are often the same they do not necessarily correspond to the same points

Lip rounding is another variable, generally associated with back vowels




‘pay’, ‘ made’, ‘maid’, ‘reign’, ‘obey’



I, tie, eye, Thai, sigh



Loud, house, shout



Clear, deer, here



Air, where, care



Triphthongs: diphthong + schwa

In North American Englsh- and increasingly in other varities- these are disappearing, to be replaced by diphthongs + consonant + schwa= two syllables

player, fire, hour

SCOTTISH triphthongs

Examples: http://ead.univ-angers.fr/~menan/cerel/english/phonetics/triphthongs.htm

Scottish: http://www.fonetiks.org/engsou4sc.html





Today have covered some basics.

I hope you understand the IPA better, as well as its importance.

I hope that the terms used to describe sounds are no longer a mystery.

I also hope that you understand the difference between French& English sounds.


So until next week, remember:

it’s just gymnastics with music!



kind of like aerobics for your mouth ….



Bibliography

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