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What is phonology?
An abstract system that relates to the distribution of sounds in language. They can be identified how many phonemes a language has by identifying minimal pairs
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What is phonetics?
- Allophones which are a more detailed potential realisation of a phoneme (basic concept of the sound of a consonant).
- Different people pronounce this differently
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What is a phoneme?
Smallest contrastive unit in the sound system of a language
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What is a vowel?
Produced when impedance of the air through the vocal tract is minimal and the voice tract is completely open.
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What is an allophone?
A phonetic variant of a phoneme in a particular language
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What is a consonant?
Sounds made by a partial or complete closure of the vocal tract
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What is consonant phonology?
- Air being expelled from the lungs
- Airflow is restricted at some point along the vocal tract and this produces consonants
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What type of sound is the English language made up of?
Egressive (outward flowing) stress-timed (rather than syllable timed like Japanese)
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What is the place of articulation called?
Glottis
(responsible for voicing)
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What are glottal sounds?
Made when 'h' sound is said or when someone speaks w/ glottal stops
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What is the velum?
The soft palette that produces velar sounds, by raising the tongue towards the soft palette in the mouth
- (k,g)
- The 'in' sound in 'ring'
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What is the alveolar ridge?
- The ridge in front of the tongue behind the top teeth. Produces alveolar sounds such as 'd,n,z,s'
- All consonants are produced around the alveolar ridge.
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What is the post alveolar?
The hard palette which is further back in the mouth than the alveolar (schwa produced here)
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What is the palate?
Hard palate between postalveolar and velar. Produces palatals like the /j/ in yellow
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What are dental sounds and where are they produced?
Made with tongue on top of front teeth and lips
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What are labiodental sounds and where are they produced?
Bottom lip to top front teeth
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What are bilabial sounds and where are they produced?
With lips together
- /p/ - peace
- /b/ - base
- /m/ - monkey
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What is the difference between voiced and voiceless sounds?
Voiceless sounds are through an open glottis whereas voiced sounds are through a closed glottis which vibrates to create sound.
- /s/ = voiceless
- /z/ = voiced
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What are the five manners of articulation?
- Plosive
- Nasal
- Fricative
- Affricate
- Approximant
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What is the plosive manner of articulation?
Complete closure of vocal tract then release, can't hold onto the plosives sound
/p/ /b/ /k/ /g/
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What is the nasal manner of articulation?
Complete closure of vocal tract with nasal passage open. You can hold on to nasal sounds (humming) and they are always voiced
/m/ /n/
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What is the fricative manner of articulation?
Lips closed with small gap for air to escape. Can hold on to sound and they are buzzy or hissy
/f/ /v/
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What is the affricate manner of articulation?
Plosive which is released slightly more slowly, so is quickly followed by a fricative
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What is the approximant manner of articulation?
Larger gap between articulation - always voiced
- /w/ - weird
- /j/ - yo
- /r/ - rope
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Are vowels voiced or unvoiced?
Vowels are always voiced
(unless whispering)
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What are diphthongs?
Not produced in all areas of the UK
A sound formed by the combination of two vowels in a single syllable, in which the sound begins as one vowel and moves towards another (coin, loud)
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What are monophthongs?
Words with one vowel sound in a single position
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What is the most common vowel sound in the English language?
schwa (ə)
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What are the features of connected speech?
- Stress + schwa
- Assimilation
- Elision
- /r/ - linking
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What two forms can schwa be found in?
Weak and strong
(unstressed and stressed)
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What is the weak form of schwa?
Unstressed syllables in polysyllabic words
- 'bitter' - /ˈbɪtə/
- 'about' - /əˈbaʊt/
- dependant' - /dɪˈpɛnd(ə)nt/
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What is assimilation?
- Voiced alveolar plosive before a bilabial nasal becomes a voiced bilabial plosive.
- Properties of articulation influence how the preceding consonant is articulated
'Ed Miliband' is an example
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What is elision?
- Sounds dropping out after sounds come together
- Consonants are sometimes deleted (elided) from clusters to make articulation easier.
- This often affects alveolar plosives.
'next day' - /nɛksdɛɪ/
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Most English accents are 'non-rhotic'. What does that mean?
Don't roll the 'r' sound
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What is a linking 'r'?
Sound that connects words
/jəra:nti/ - 'your aunty'
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What is an intrusive 'r'?
Sound that is added into words
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Why does the phonology of English differ?
Because of regional accents, which are altered by interaction with class, ethnicity and gender
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What is RP?
Received Pronunciation used in dictionaries
Originally put forward by aristocrats.
Not everyone speaks in RP
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What is the strut vowel?
A regional accent that changes the sounds of vowel
- Southern English 'put' = /p^t/
- Northern English 'put' = /pʊt/
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What is eye dialect?
- A spelling system to indicate non-standard (deviant) accents
- Creative graphology to 'mimic' accent
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What are the two types of onomatopoeia?
lexical and non lexical
'splash' vs 'kran kran'
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What 3 features are vital in poetry discourse?
- Sound patterning
- Rhythm (Repetition of patterns)
- Metre
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What is an iambic foot?
Two syllables with the first being unstressed and the second being stressed
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What is a trochaic foot
Two syllables with the first being stressed and the second being unstressed
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What is onomatopoeia?
A feature of sound patterning which forms a bridge between style and content. Can occur in lexical and non-lexical forms
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What is lexical onomatopoeia?
- Lexical onomatopoeia uses recognised words (eg buzz) whose pronunciation enacts their sound outside of language
- Lexical onomatopoeia plays an important role in the stylistic texture of poetry
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What is nonlexical onomatopoeia?
Nonlexical onomatopoeia refers to clusters of sounds which echo the world in a more unmediated way, without the intercession of linguistic structure (eg the mimicking of the sound of a car revving its engine may be ‘vroom vroom’)
Nonlexical onomatopoeia is the most direct form of verbal imitative art insofar as patterns of sound are crafted to represent the real world without the intercession of grammatical or lexical structures
Nonlexical onomatopoeia requires the reader to have knowledge about the sound that the writer is recreating
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What is the phonaesthetic fallacy?
The idea that labels given to sounds are impressionistic and have no place in the systematic study of speech sounds
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Are the effects of onomatopoeia visual or aural?
Both
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