Phonetics 1:Articulatory Phonetics


Class Slides

This week, you will use a combination of readings and interactive phonetics websites to familiarize yourself with the basics of articulatory and acoustic phonetics.

Readings

Language Files 2.0-2.4

Exercises

Do exercises 7-26 in file 2.8. They are all for practice, and they are designed to help you understand how language sounds are produced, to sensitize you to the sounds of spoken English, to alert you to the mismatches between these sounds and the English orthographic system, and to move you towards a familiarity with the international phonetic alphabet as a representation of speech sounds.

Homework

Here's the phonetics homework assignment due Monday, October 3, at the beginning of class.


You will find the following websites particularly useful for learning articulatory phonetics:

The University of Iowa offers an interactive articulatory phonetics website, which shows a moving sagittal view of the articulatory organs pronouncing the sounds of English.

Check out, also, the website of the International Phonetics Association for the complete IPA Alphabet

The UCLA Phonetics lab has a vast phonetics website, which includes recordings of the sounds of many languages. Check out (i.e. listen to) a selection of vowels and consonants from a variety of languages that you may never have heard before in the index of sounds.
The UCLA phonetics site also has an
online IPA chart that allows you to click on the symbols and hear the sounds.


Totally Optional

Mark Liberman has written a particularly good introduction to phonetics and phonology for his introduction to linguistics. We recommend it highly.

Karen Chung has a page with a variety of resources on some kinds of consonants you'll be unfamiliar with: ejectives, implosives and clicks

The Exploratorium has a page that shows how a duck squawk can produce vowels when passed through plastic resonant chambers. This page will give you a good idea of how resonating chambers are configured in the human vocal tract to produce different vowel sounds.

If you want to learn a little more about the physics of speech, visit the Georgia State Hyperphysics site.

If you want to see how articulatory phonetics is put to work in animation, see this animation page.

If you want to mess with spectrograms yourself, download the free Praat acoustic phonetics software.


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