The Role of Semi-Vowels
The Role of Semi-Vowels
The Role of Semi-Vowels
1- Introduction:
The important purpose of the paper is to explain how semi-
vowels are looked at according to their position and function (role)
within words, and their effect on the following sounds when they are
initial, and on the preceding ones when they are middle in words.
They have been called (semi-vowels) by many writers, but they can
also be given the modern term "approximates". Also are called
"glide".
The most important thing to remember about these phonemes
is that they are phonetically like vowels but phonologically like
consonants. From the phonetic point of view the articulation of [j] is
practically the same a£ that of a front close vowel such as /i:/, but is
very short. In the same way [w] is closely similar to /u:/.
Despite the fact that semi-vowels are, in phonetic terms,
generally vocalic, they are treated within the consonant class, mainly
because their function is consonantal rather than vowel like, i.e. they
have a marginal rather than a central situation in syllable, /j/ and /w/
occur initially or in an initial cluster preceding a syllabic sound .
between (while) and (wile), and (what) and (watt) and so on.
Moreover, many Africans, when they attempt to say [hw], are apt to
make the [h] element much too marked or even to say [kw], which
sound quite wrong.
A letter (w) is silent before (r), as in (write) (wring) and (wrist)
and sometimes after (s), as in (answer), (sword). It is also usually
silent in the endings-wich and -wick in place names, as in (Harwick)
[harid3] and Benvick [berik]. The combinations (wh) is nearly always
pronounced [hw]. Important exceptions are (who, whom, whose,
whole, whoop, whore), where (wh) stands for [h] (Christophersen,
1956: 128-130).
The vocalic allophones of RP /w/ are articulated by the
tongue assuming the position for a back half-close to close vowel
(depending upon the degree of openness of the following sound) and
moving away immediately to the position of the following sound; the
lips are rounded when followed by /u:, u/ or / :/ than when preceding
a more open or front vowel, e.g. woo, wood, war, with; in those cases
where /w/ precedes /u:/, the lip-rounding for /w/ is closer and more
energetic than that associated with /u:/, the soft palate is raised and the
vocal flods vibrate; but when /w/ follows a forties consonant, some
devoicing take place: when /w/ follows accented /t, k/, the devoicing
is complete. In this latter case, it is the bilabial friction rather than the
glide which identifies the phoneme; such words as (swoop, swoon),
are distinguished from (soup), (soon), not only by the stronger lip
action associated with /w/ but also by its partially devoiced friction.
Consonants preceding /w/, socially initially in an accented
syllable, will be lip-rounded in anticipation of /w/, e.g. (twist, queen,
swing, language, conquest), e.g. in (onward, blind weed, front wheel,
this one) (Gimson, 1980: 215).
C03VC04
(yes) has no audible approach, no hold, but only a rapid release, or off
glide from the [i] position. A medial semivowel, like the [w] in
(away), has an approach (on-glide) followed immediately by a release
(off-glide) with no intervening hold. The articulators go from a neutral
or relaxed position into the position for [w], which they immediately
leave again (Catford, 1994: 71-72).
Biography
Wells, J.C and Colson, Creta. (1971). Practical Phonetics.
Great Britain; The Patman Press, Bath.
Catford, J.C. (1994). A Practical Introduction to
Phonetics. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Christophersen, Paul. (1956). An English Phonetics
Course. Great Britain: Longman Grean and Co. LTD.
Gimson. A. C. (1980). An Introduction to the Pronunciation of
English . Great Britain: University College London .
Ladefoged. Peter. (1975). A Course in Phonetics. New York.
Jones, Danial. (1936). An Outline of English Phonemes.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Jones, Danial. (1969). The Pronunciation of English.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press .