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Phonetics, part III: Suprasegmentals October 19, 2012
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The Docket 1.Morphology homeworks to hand back! 2.I have mid-term review sheets, as well. 3. Suprasegmentals! Plus: more phonetics practice. 4. Homework #2 is still due on Monday (October 22 nd ).
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Another Basic Distinction Consonants and vowels together make up the class of segments in phonetics. Each segment is a configuration of articulations… ordered in time in an utterance. Languages also have phonetic features which can span across multiple segments. = suprasegmental features supra = “above” the segment. One basic example: Languages organize strings of segments into syllables.
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Syllabicity Syllables are hard to define phonetically… But native speakers have an intuitive sense of what does and does not constitute a syllable. Normally, syllables will have: consonants (optionally) at beginning and end; a vowel in the middle. = the syllabic “peak” However, in English, nasals (/m/, /n/) and liquids (/l/, /r/) can form the peak of a syllable. = syllabic consonants.
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Syllabic Examples Syllabic consonants are transcribed with a small vertical dash underneath them. Examples: ‘chasm’ ‘ribbon’ ‘eagle’ ‘feature’ The book wants you to believe that there are vowels in these syllables: [ər], [əl], etc. …but don’t believe it!
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Suprasegmentals Other suprasegmental features include: 1.Stress 2.Length 3.Tone 4.Intonation These suprasegmental features are always defined in a relative manner. Some segments are longer than others, Some syllables are more stressed than others, etc.
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1. Stress Stress makes a syllable sound more prominent. (due to increased articulatory effort) Stress may be denoted by an accent over the vowel in the stressed syllable. Examples of stress contrasts: “contrast” (N) (V) “insult” (N) (V)
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2. Length Languages can distinguish segments on the basis of length. = some segments simply last longer than others. Italian contrasts both long and short vowels and consonants.
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Danish Vowels Danish contrasts long and short vowels.
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3. Tone In tone languages, speakers change the rate at which their vocal folds vibrate to signal important differences in meaning. Note: we hear the rate of vocal fold vibration as the “pitch” of a speaker’s voice. In tone languages, each syllable is produced with a characteristic tone. 1.Register tone languages Pitch must hit a certain level on any given syllable. 2.Contour tone languages Pitch changes on a single syllable may form a complex pattern.
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Ibibio Tones Ibibio is a register tone language spoken in southern Nigeria
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Mandarin Tone ma1: mother ma2: hemp ma3: horse ma4: to scold Mandarin (Chinese) is a classic example of a contour tone language.
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Mandarin Sentences ma1-ma0 ma4 ma3. “Mother scolds the horse.” ma3 ma4 ma1-ma0. “The horse scolds mother.”
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Intonation English is not a tone language like Chinese or Ibibio… but it has something called “intonation” English intonation: 1.High and Low accents attach to stressed syllables (transcribed with H* or L*) 2.High and Low tones appear at the ends of phrases and utterances. (transcribed with H% or L%) The important difference: English “tones” are specified by context, not by the lexicon.
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Intonation Examples In English intonation, statements usually have: A high accented syllable (H*) within the sentence. A low tone (L%) at the end of the sentence. H*L% Manny came with Anna. Meanwhile, questions usually have: A low accented syllable (L*) within the sentence. A high tone (H%) at the end of the sentence. L* H% Manny came with Anna?
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