Phonetics and Phonology
Phonetics and Phonology
Phonetics and Phonology
CHAPTER 1 – introduction
Human language is as complex in its own way as any of the biochemical and anatomical
functions of the human body. All native speakers of English share a set of mental rules wich
guarantee that they will know how to group the words into meaningful units.
• A Frameworks is a structure which holds something together and so knowing the
frameworks of a language enables you to understand how that language is
structured and what rules operace to produce that structure. The frameworks of any
living language change in a variety of ways.
Lexis ➝ the words of the language
Grammar ➝ the way words are combined into sentences
Discourse ➝ the way sentences are combined into texts
Phonology ➝ the sound of the language.
STANDARD ENGLISH ➝ the yardstick which linguists use and it is the english of newspaper,
television, radio, public documents ecc, but it also the variety of english which foreigners
learn. Standard English is a dialect (the lexis and the grammar of a particular language
variety)
➔ VOICE SETTING
Those features of accent that result from the characteristic disposition and use of the
articulatory organs by speakers of a particular language, and which affects the production of
all the individual sounds common to that language.
Pronunciation is one aspect of language learning where transfer from the L, can persist even
in advanced students (L interference). Each L, brings its own 'typical' pronunciation mistakes
to English, this is known technically as using the wrong voice-setting.
It is quite easy to identify a speaker's L1 thanks to the use of their L, voice settings when
speaking English. For learners to acquire a more natural pronunciation they need to
understand and learn to use the English voice-setting! Using the wrong voice-setting can
sometimes lead to a breakdown in communication
➔ TRANSMISSION
The physical properties of sounds as they travel from the mouth to the ear
➔ RECEPTION
The way in which the ear and the brain receive and respond to sounds
Learnes cannot rely on the spelling of a word meanwhile the problem is the opposite for
native speakers because English schoolchildren spend incredible amounts of time learning to
read and esp. to write. Many adults have very poor spelling
PHONETICS: is the study of the sound of speech (how we produce speech and how we
perceive speech), so it focuses on the way which sounds are physically produced. There are
several several branches of phonetics like
-articulatory phonetics: how the sound is physically produced
-acoustic phonetics: the acoustic characteristics of the speech sound
PHONEMES: is an abstract concept and is a single sound , for example /p/ if swapped with
another phoneme, could change one word to another. This is an idealised version of the
sound in question and it is not real so it is an abstract concept
ALLOPHONES: the surface form which occurs in the realisation of a phoneme (clear l and
dark l are allophones of the phoneme /l/)
GRAPHEME: letter
THE INTERNATIONAL PHONETIC ALPHABET (IPA): it is a special alphabet in which one symbol
always represents the same sound and in which there is a symbol for every possible sound a
language learner might need
2) Manner of articulation
The way in which consonants are produced and to describe the manner of articulation we
need to focus on what happens to the airstream after it has passed through the vocal
cords.
It may be
-stopped—> sounds that are completely blocked in the mouth are called STOPS (plosives
and nasal because both of them involve a complete closure or stopping off of the vocal tract
at one of the places of articulation before the relies of air). They are MOMENTARY
-partly blocked —> sounds in which the airstream is partially intern in the mouth is called
CONTINUANTS (fricatives)
-allowed to move freely —> sounds in which the airstream in uninterrupted is called
CONTINUANTS
A sound may be
PLOSIVES
Plosives are sounds produced by stopping the airstream.
A blockage may be created by the movement of one articulator against another, or by the
movement of two articulators against each other. The air trapped by the blockage is then
released suddenly, making a small explosion enough to be heard:
NASAL
Nasal are sounds produced when the soft palate is lowered and the airstream continues to
flow in the production of these sounds.
They are called stops because a blockage in the mouth prevents air escaping orally
FRICATIVE
Fricatives are sounds produced by a partial blockage of the airstream resulting in friction as
the air is forced through the small gap. They also contrast with plosives and nasal in that they
are continuants so they can be extended as long as you have breath to articulate them
AFFRICATIVE
Affricates are sounds produced by combining a brief blockage of the airstream with an
obstructed release which causes some friction.
Like the plosives, these are called stops.
Affricate sound is a combination of plosive and fricative.
APPROXIMANT / LATERAL (meaning ‘at the side’ quindi esce dai lati)
[l] —> can be described as a lateral consonant because the passage of air through the mouth
is along the sides of the tongue rather than along the centre
This sound is different depending upon its position in a word:
1) [I] before a vowel sounds quite different from —> CLEAR l (ex: leg / log )
2) [l] in other positions —> DARK l (ex: meal / till )
[r] ; [w] ; [j] —> these sounds are described as approximants or frictionless continuants
because although they are consonants they do not adopt the articulator positions of the
plosives, nasals or fricatives
[r] is a CENTRAL APPROXIMANT because the sides of the tongue are very close to or
touching the alveolar ridge above the back teeth and the air escapes down the middle of the
mouth
[w] is produced by a partial closure of the lip, and is therefore a bilabila approximant, but the
back of the tongue is raised towards the soft palate and so this sound is a secondary velar
articulation
[j] is a palate approximant since the sides of the tongue are raised towards the hard palate
DIACRITICS
SONO I SEGNI
(questo segno è
un diacritic)
There are 3 criteria to classificate vowel
1) The part of the TONGUE that is RAISED / height of the tongue
FRONT: the front of the tongue will be raised towards the alveolar ridge and the hard palate
CENTRAL: the tongue tends to be flatters than fro front or back vowels
BACK: the back of the tongue will be raised towards the soft palate
The vowels /iː/ and /ɑː/ appear very near two extremes of the vowel grid. This means they
are very useful as points of reference. Daniel Jones identified eight reference points around
the grid, working out which vowels would be produced if the tongue fell from high to low at
the front or back of the mouth in equal measures. These reference vowels are known as
cardinal vowels and are shown in Figure 9.6. When cardinal vowels are written they are
often preceded by C as an indication that the phonetic symbol represents a cardinal vowel
3) The POSITION and SHAPE of the LIPS
UNROUNDED (SPREAD)
/i:/ the corners of the lips are moved away from each other (as for a smile)
NEUTRAL
/ə/ (the noise when hesitanting “er”) the lips are not rounded or spread
ROUNDED
/u:/ the corners of the lips are brought towards each other and the lips pushed forward
The ‘neutral’ sound /ə/ has a special name –> schwa. To articulate schwa you have your
mouth in what is likely to be its most natural position.One of the reasons why schwa is so
common in English is because vowels in unstressed syllables normally revert to it.
The grid (Figure 9.7) used for plotting pure (monophthong) vowels can also be used to plot
the eight diphthongs of RP, using an arrow to indicate the direction of the glide in terms of
tongue height and which part of the tongue is highest.
From the figure above we can notice that there are
- 5 CLOSING DIPHTHONGS: three diphthongs move towards /ɪ/, and another two
towards /ʊ/
- 3 CENTRING DIPHTHONGS: the other three diphthongs move towards /ə/ as the
finishing position and (/ə/ is a central vowel)
Phonology is concerned with the phoneme systems of languages and with the individual
sounds – or segments – when they are no longer in isolation but grouped together in
syllables and words. Phonology is often divided into two broad areas
1) SEGMENTAL PHONOLOGY
It deals with the distribution of the phonemes, how there vary in different environments and
how phonemes group together to form syllables and words
2) SUPRASEGMENTAL PHONOLOGY
It deals with aspects of speech such as pitch and intonation
/m/ and /n/: they occur (mat, nose) BUT /ɳ/: it never occurs
/l/, /r/, /w/ and /j/: they occur (look, rise, wet, you)
/m/ and /n/: they occur (bomb—> /bɒm/ , can) + /ɳ/: it occurs (sing)
ONLY /l/: it occurs (cool)
/m/ and /n/: they occur (among, ant) + /ɳ/: it occurs (finger)
/l/, /r/: often (allow, arrow) AND /w/: more rarely (award) BUT /j/: does not
THE DISTRIBUTION OF VOWELS
In monosyllabic words, the structure can be: VC, CV, CVC (egg, boo, bite)
CLOSING DIPHTHONGS: they glides towards /ɪ/ /ʊ/and they occur in ALL 3 structures (CVC,
VC, CV)
- /eɪ/ bait, age, bay
- /aɪ/ bite, ice, buy
- /ɔɪ/ void, oil, boy
- /əʊ/ bode, ode, beau
- /aʊ/ fowl, owl, bough
Vowel: is the central element of a syllable and it can be a word (ex: ear). If a word has 2
distinct vowel it is a disyllabic word
Consonant: cannot constitute a word maximum number of consonants which can begins
syllable is 3. When we have a combination of consonants we have a CLUSTER
Phonotactics:the way phonemes group together to form syllables, they do according to a
pattern or syllable template.
CLUSTERS 1
When we have a combination of consonants we have a CLUSTER
The maximum number of consonants which can begins syllable is 3 (ex: strange, spring)
➔ INITIAL CONSONANTS
We mentioned earlier that all consonants, can occur in word initial position: all these
consonants are called initial consonants. The preceding and following consonants are called
pre-initial and post-initial consonants.
CLUSTERS 2
➔ FINAL CONSONANTS
As with syllable-initial consonants, we can say that all consonants that can occur in word-
final positions are final consonants
Thus, all consonants with the exceptions of the approximants /r*, j, w/ and of the glottal
fricative /h/ are final consonants.
Consonants which precede them are pre-final, and those which follow are post-final.
SYLLABIFICATION
The way in which a word is divided into syllables
Sometimes the morphemes in a word will correlate with its syllable structure —> blackbird?
toaster?
- /təυ-/ + /-stə/?
- /təυst-/ + /-ə/?
- Although toaster = [toast + -er], we do not syllabify it as [toast + er] but as [toa + ster]
magnet?
- The consonant cluster /gn/ is impossible both as an onset and as a coda —> [mag+net]
TRIPHTHONGS
Triphthongs result from the fact that, sometimes, a closing diphthong is followed by a glide
towards schwa:
- fire /faɪǝ/ In this case the number of syllables perceived depends on the
- sour/saʊǝ/ prominence given to the middle element of the triphthong.
SYLLABIC CONSONANTS
The initial assumption was that a vowel is obligatory in a syllable, otherwise there is one
exception: syllabic consonants
-when the vowel in the syllable is not stressed, it is so reduced that it disappears, leaving the
coda to function as the peak
-instead, a nasal (/m/ or /n/) or an approximant (/l/ and sometimes /r/) functions as the
peak of the syllable
-button: [bʌ] + [tɒn] —> [bʌtən] —> [bʌtņ]
CONNECTED SPEECH
Phonemes vary when in contact with adjacent phonemes from other words, these
variations are the result of connected speech
Examples:
• last week —> /lɑːst wiːk/ [lɑːswiːk]
• Just before —> /dɜʌsbɪfɔː/
• Slept together —> /sleptəɡeðə/
LIAISON: in some circumstances segments may be lost, but it is also common for segments
to appear or be added at word boundaries
In English, the segment which usually appears is /r/. RP is a non-rhotic accent, so words
which end in /r/ in some accents will not do so in RP.
For example, a speaker of a rhotic accent will pronounce four as [fɔr] whereas an RP speaker
will pronounce it [fɔ:] [FOUR;FLOOR;SURE;]. However, when four is followed by a word
which begins with a vowel, the /r/ is likely to be pronounced in RP. So, like a speaker of a
rhotic accent, an RP speaker may well pronounce four apes as [fɔr eips], with the /r/
emerging at the end of four. This occurrence of /r/ is known as linking r
ASSIMILATION: describes the process in which two phonemes occurring together are
influenced by each other, making the sounds more alike
Example: I can go —> /ɑɪ kæn ɡəʊ/ —> [ɑɪkæŋɡəʊ]
There are 3 types of assimilation
1) ANTICIPATORY assimilation
In a phrase such as ten pin bowling, the /n/ at the end of ten is often pronounced [m] in anticipation of the
fact that the following word, pin, begins with the bilabial phoneme /p/.
This could also happen to the /n/ at the end of pin as this too precedes a bilabial phoneme (/b/). In
connected speech, then, ten pin bowling will probably be pronounced [tem pɪm bəʊlɪŋ]
2) PERSEVERATIVE assimilation
This is when a feature of one segment 'perseveres' and is found in the following segment.
The two elements of the compound ashtray in isolation will probably be pronounced [æʃ] and [treɪ].
But in connected speech or simply in the utterance of ashtray by itself, it is likely a speaker will say [æʃʧreɪ].
Here, the fricative quality of the /ʃ/ at the end of ash has been carried over to the /t/ at the beginning of
tray, causing it to surface as [ʧ]
3) COALESCENT assimilation
This is when two segments merge into one.
Example: haven’t you is likely to be pronounced [hævənʧuː] with the /t/ at the end of
haven’t and the /j/ at the start of you being merged to give [ʧ]
1) PRIMARY STRESS
Primary stress is the syllable with the most emphasis in a word, marked by placing (′)
2) SECONDARY STRESS
Secondary stress means the syllable also has emphasis but not as strongly as the syllable
with primary stress, it is marked by a small vertical line (ˌ) just before the syllable it relates
to
RHYTHM
Rhythm refers to the pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in speech, we often
associate rhythm with a degree of regularity in this pattern in contrast to arhythmic speed
where the pattern is irregular.
The latter is likely to occur when we are nervous or hesitant; in general, though, our speech
tends to be fairly rhythmic.
What is of particular significance is the way we adjust the rhythm of our speech in order to
make it more regular.
In normal spontaneous speech it is highly unlikely that there will be a consistent alternation
between stressed and unstressed syllables, what speakers of English normally do to
compensate for the irregularity in occurrence of stressed and unstressed syllables is to
space the stressed syllables at approximately equal intervals -> this adds something like a
REGULAR BEAT to the utterance.
➢ Stress-timed languages: languages which use this strategy as a means of constructing
rhythm as opposed to
➢ Syllable-timed languages: such as French where all syllables have approximately
equal duration.
English is fundamentally a stress-timed language although there are some varieties of
global English (such as Indian English) that have a rather different rhythmic pattern.
The alternation between stressed and unstressed syllables results in a regular rhythm
Example:
a cup of tea, a piece of cake -> if, however, we join them with the conjunction and, the
regularity is slightly disrupted by the fact that two unstressed syllables now occur between
tea and piece -> the likelihood is that speakers will space the stressed syllables at fairly
regular intervals irrespective of the number of unstressed syllables which occur between
them
✦ In order to achieve more regularity of rhythm, stress shift will occur on individual words
✦ Some polysyllabic words contain both a primary and a secondary stress -> however, in
connected speech, the normal distinction between primary and secondary stress may
disappear, or stress positions change
✦ Ex. trend for a primary stress in a polysyllabic word to shift or become less prominent
when the next stressed syllable that follows it, albeit in a different word, also has primary
stress (compund nouns)
✦ Ex. tendency among speakers to alternate primary and secondary stresses. Similarly, the
inclination to alternate stressed and unstressed syllables is sufficiently strong at times to
shift stress to a previously unstressed syllable
Strong and weak forms -> The choice between the strong and weak forms of the words can
have an effect on the rhythm of the sentence in question
- When we utter monosyllabic words in isolation, we give the full value to their vowels ->
true for bothlexical and grammatical words
- However, in connected speech, the vowels in monosyllabic grammatical words are often
reduced, resulting in the entire word becoming unstressed
✦ The preposition from, for example, in isolation would be pronounced normally. By
contrast, in a string such as my holiday from hell, the vowel in from would be reduced to
schwa
✦ A number of monosyllabic grammatical words like these which will be unstressed in
some contexts but stressed in others -> these words have both strong (namely stressed)
and weak (unstressed)
✦ In addition to the above, the primary auxiliaries am, are, was and were can also occur in
both weak and strong forms when functioning as lexical verbs
There are various reasons why a weak or strong form may be selected
1) The position of a word in a sentence may affect the form it takes
English is characterised by the vast number of people who speak it and also by the extent it is
used global.
English speakers can be divided into 3 groups
1) ENL: people who have English as a native language
2) ESL: people who have it as a second language, speakers usually use a different
language at home but English for mor public purposes —> not as fluent as enl
3) EFL: speakers across the world who have learnt it as a foreign language
Elsewhere, English may have the status of an official language, but its importance is as lingua
franca so a language that is adopted as a common language between speakers whose native
languages are different (this is the case in India, where the primary offi- cial language is Hindi
and where English is only spoken as a native language by a smallish minority. However,
English is used by the majority as a second language and has considerable importance in
government and education)
Standard Englishes do vary across the globe. The non-standard varieties will differ from the
standards as a result of various social, regional and historical factors.
Standard varieties tend to be
-national
-non-regional
Non-standard dialects are often linked to a specific geographical region or community, and are
likely to have associated accents. Of all the non-standard varieties of English, the most marked in
terms of their difference from any of the standards are the English-based pidgin and creole varieties
found in the Caribbean, the Pacific and West Africa.
Phonological variation: CONSONANTS
1)PLOSIVE / t /
UK: /t/ is often realised as a glottal stop [ʔ] (ex: butter might be pronounced [bʌʔə] )
However, the glottal stop only occurs postvocalically (after a vowel) and so never replaces [t]
word-initially. Although the glottal stop has often been stigmatised as ‘lazy’ or ‘uneducated’
speech, in certain contexts, it can also be heard in the prestigious RP accent when /t/ occurs
before a syllable-initial consonant, as in hat·stand /hæʔ·stænd/. (The dot in this example
represents a syllable boundary —> fine e inizio di una sillaba)
T-FLAPPING
Process where intervocalically /t/ is often voiced as a flapped ‘d’ sound [d], like in GenAm
Liverpool accent: we can find the realisation of intervocalic /t/ as a FLAPPED ‘r’ [ɾ]
Indian English and South Asia varieties: /t/ and /d/ tend do be RETROFLEX [ ʈ ] and [ ɖ ]
TH-FRONTING
Process where speakers will realise (especially in the Estuary English accent)
- [θ] as [f]
- [ð] as [v]
In Estuary English: /θ/ can be [f] in any position, but /ð/ can only be [v] word-medially or
word-finally
In Irish English, /t, d/ are usually dental plosives [t , d]
STOPPING
The process by which fricatives ( θ and ð) are realised as plosives ( t and d)
- in accents with a creole history speakers
- in Irish English
- in Indian English, usually with heavy aspiration
4) NASAL / ŋ /
This nasal is sometimes realised as [n] when it occurs in the -ing suffix so singing and dancing
could be pronounced [sɪŋɪn ən dɑnsɪn]. This feature can be found particularly in the UK and
USA
England speakers from the West Midlands, parts of Lancashire and Yorkshire: they will
pronounce /ŋ/ as [ŋɡ] so singing becomes [sɪŋɡɪŋɡ]
5) APPROXIMANT CENTRAL / r /
6) APPROXIMANT LATERAL / l /
The approximant /l/ has two allophones in RP, with clear l occurring at the beginning of a
syllable, dark l at the end.
In other accents, /l/ is generally clear in both positions (Welsh English) or some degree
darker (in other words, even more palatalised), as in Scottish English and also Australian
English.
In the London accent, and particularly in Cockney: final /l/ or /l/ preceding a consonant is
often realised as a vowel so meal is [miʊʷ] and milk is [mɪʊk]
Asian accents and Irish English: they use a less common but alternative strategy to cluster
reduction by introducing AN EPENTHETIC VOWEL, for example skin —> [səkɪn], film —>
[fɪləm], warm —> [wɑrəm], arm—> [ɑrəm]
YOD COALESCENCE
The C+/j/ combination is replaced with an affricate, causing
/t/ + /j/ to become [tʃ], for example tune —> [ʧuːn]
/d/ + /j/ to become [ʤ]
YOD-DROPPING
The absence of /j/ in the pronunciation of a word where it is normally present,for example
tune —> [tuːn]
MONOPHTHONGS
1) / ʌ / —> [ ʊ ]
Newcastle accent (like several northern English accents): has no /ʌ/, nor does it have /ʒ/, but
it does have /a/, which is a low front unrounded vowel.
Northern accents on England: this short vowel is absent, and it is replaced by [ʊ], so shut
and tuck are pronounced [ʃʊt] and [tʊk] respectively
2) / ɑː / —> [ æ ]
In a variety of accents, the long vowel /ɑː/ is often realised as [æ], depending on the
environment in which it occurs. Australian speakers are likely to realise /ɑː/ as [æ] in some
contexts
In General American and in northern England: [æ] occurs before particular consonants or
consonant clusters
Welsh English and Northern Irish English: they show a tendency to reduce /ɑː/
3) / ɒ / and / ɔː /
General American: this vowel in general American is absent so cot is pronounced with [ɑ]
Australian and South African English: they realise this vowel pairs as [ɔ and o]
Conservative RP speaker: they will have the short vowel at the end of city meanwhile
speakers of mainstream RP or Estuary English will have the longer vowel [i]. A similar pattern
is noticeable in South African English in closed vowels where bit and bin will be [bit] and [bin]
respectively.
The short vowel /1/ can occur in both stressed and unstressed syllables
Australian and New Zealand speakers: they are likely to use schwa in unstressed syllables,
so damage will be [damad] rather than [damic] and carpet [ka:pat] rather than [ka:pit).
DIPHTHONGS
Diphthongs also vary considerably across accents of English
PROSODIC FEATURES