IyabodeOmolaraD 2011 CHAPTERTWO IntroductoryPhonetics
IyabodeOmolaraD 2011 CHAPTERTWO IntroductoryPhonetics
IyabodeOmolaraD 2011 CHAPTERTWO IntroductoryPhonetics
The diagram shows the major human organs in the vocal tract involved in
speech production.
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AN: 523847 ; Iyabode Omolara Daniel, Author.; Introductory Phonetics and Phonology of English
Account: ns145102.main.ehost
6 Chapter Two
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The Mechanism of Speech Sounds 7
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8 Chapter Two
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The Mechanism of Speech Sounds 9
State 1.
Vocal folds tightly held together as for the glottal stop /߶/.
State 2.
Vocal folds held open as for normal breathing and voiceless sounds.
State 3.
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10 Chapter Two
The vocal folds are loosely held together to form a narrow glottis, which
causes vibration as the air passes through. This results in the production of
voice in sounds.
(Adapted from Cruttenden, 1994)
Once the air stream leaves the larynx, it is further modified in the
upper regions of the vocal tract. The shape assumed by the pharynx, the
velum (soft palate) and the mouth have great implications for sound
production. These organs are therefore called resonators.
The pharyngeal cavity extends from the top of the larynx and the
oesophagus, beyond the epiglottis and the root of the tongue, to the region
in the rear of the soft palate.
The velum or soft palate may be lowered to allow the air escape
through the nose and the mouth. This produces nasalised sounds as in /dN/
of sudden and the nasalised vowels. Many of these nasalised vowels exist
in the Yoruba language e.g. /õ/ as in òࡦ kan, /ƭ/ èࡦ yin etc.
The soft palate may be lowered so that the air passes through the
nose, but with a complete obstruction at some point in the mouth. This
obstruction results in the air coming out through the nasal cavity. This is
how nasal consonants are produced in English. These are /m, n, ƾ/ as in
ram, ran, rang.
The soft palate may be raised, thus blocking the air stream from
escaping through the nasal cavity. All normal English sounds have this
oral escape, except for the nasal sounds mentioned above.
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The Mechanism of Speech Sounds 11
Fig. 4 shows the nasal and oral release of the airstream from the lungs to
show the articulation of oral, nasal, and nasalised sounds.
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12 Chapter Two
of your tongue to touch all these parts mentioned above to locate them.
But better still, you should take a mirror to look at the points mentioned,
which are located in the upper part of your mouth, as you touch them with
your tongue.
The lips constitute the final orifice of the mouth in an oral
articulation. Their shape usually affects the total cavity. They may be
shut tightly or held loosely or rounded. If they are shut totally, they form a
complete obstruction of the air stream. The air stream is held back
momentarily before being released suddenly as in the production of
bilabial stops /p/ and /b/ in pat and bat or it is allowed to pass through the
nose as in the production of the bilabial nasal /m/ in mat.
The tongue is the most flexible organ among the movable organs of
the mouth. It is capable of assuming a great many varieties of positions of
articulation of both vowels and consonants. The tongue is a complex
muscular structure, which does not show obvious parts but had been
arbitrarily divided into four parts. These are tip, blade, front, and back.
The tip and blade are usually referred to as apex and the edges as rims.
The tongue takes various shapes in articulating vowels. The front
may be raised to the highest point in articulating /i:/ in feel or the back
similarly raised for pronouncing /u:/ as in fool or the tongue may be
relatively flat as in /a:/ to produce far. The middle of the tongue may also
be depressed as in the pronunciation of /ԥ:/ in fir. It should, however, be
noted that the tip of the tongue usually remains behind the front lower
teeth in articulating vowels. It maintains this resting position in the
articulation of all vowel types in English. You may experiment this and
write your findings to the author.
The various parts of the tongue may also come in contact with the
roof of the mouth. Thus, the tip, blade, and rims may articulate with the
teeth to produce /ș/ and /ð/, sounds normally written as th, or with the
upper alveolar ridge as in /t, d, s, n, z/. The tip and the blade (the apex)
alone may make contact with the alveolar to produce /l/, with the rims
providing an escape route for the air stream. There may also be an
intermittent contact of the apex of the tongue with the alveolar to articulate
a rolled /r/.
The front of the tongue may articulate against or near to the hard
palate. This will produce the phonemes /ݕ/ and /ݤ/ as in she and vision.
This raising of the front of the tongue towards the hard palate normally
results in palatalisation. However, this articulatory form is the main
feature of the production process of the palatal sound /j/ as we have it in
yam.
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The Mechanism of Speech Sounds 13
The back of the tongue can form a total obstruction of the air steam
by its contact with the soft palate (velum) when raised as in the case of /k/
in card and /J/ in guard. However, the soft palate gets lowered in order to
produce the velar nasal /ƾ/ as in bring.
Practice Questions
A. Draw a diagram to show the process and organs involved in the
production of speech.
B. Discuss the three possible states the glottis can have.
C. Describe five possible points in the mouth at which sounds can be
produced and two possible sounds at such points.
D. Name the most flexible and mobile organ in the mouth. State
three of such movements that made you name it as such.
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