What is Phonetics?
Why do we use Phonetics?
To transcribe exactly what is said.
Experimental Phonetics
Articulatory (Physiological) Phonetics
Acoustic Phonetics
“The study of the physical properties of
speech sounds.”
Perceptual Phonetics
Clinical Phonetics
Using phonetic information to remediate unintelligible or disordered speech.
Linguistic Phonetics
Focuses on analyzing and classifying sound systems within a language and the rules used for combining sounds with other sounds within a language.
Dialectology
Study of causes and characteristics of speech and sound differences of spoken languages.
E.g. dialects
Pragmatic Phonetics
Changes that occur as speakers adapt their speech to the perceived needs of listeners. E.g. adult – child talk
Phonetic Transcription
Using the IPA to transcribe speech of any given language
International Phonetic Association (IPA)
Linguistics
Phonology
Orthography
Phone
Any sound that can be produced by the human vocal tract or one of many possible sounds in a language.
–Examples: clicks, raspberries, a baby cooing, the [d] in “dot”
Phoneme
Speech sound in a particular language or smallest contrastive unit in a language to establish word meanings and distinguish between them. (See Week 1 Bb comparing/contrasting phone vs. phoneme)
–Examples: the phoneme /d/ distinguishes between “bea” “bead” , the /t/ & /m/ in “hat” and “ham”.
Allophone
Aa variant of a phoneme; variations of phonemes used by different speakers in various phonetic contexts, however the meaning of the word is not changed.
–e.g. /t/ in the word “let” vs. “letter”
–e.g. the /p/ in pin vs. hop vs. pop
–/ӕ/ in man vs bat
Morph
General term for unit of meaning
Morpheme
Smallest meaningful unit in grammar of language
Free morpheme
Stand alone units of meaning (think root words).
e.g “cat”
Bound Morphemes
Must be connected to a Free morpheme to have meaning (prefixes and suffixes)
e.g. the /s/ must be connected to a free morpheme such as “cat” to be “cats”
Allomorph
Variation of a morpheme.
For example, 3 allomorphs of the plural phoneme: cats, dogs, horses.
How are they pronounced vs. how are they spelled?
Prevocalic Consonants
Consonants that come before the vowel