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The English Alphabet
The English alphabet has 26 letters. Each letter has a
lower and upper case form. The letters A, E, I, O, U are vowels.
Phonetics and Phonology
Phonetics
(from the Greek word phone = sound/voice) is a fundamental branch of
Linguistics and itself has three different aspects:
Acoustic
Phonetics - a study of how speech sounds
are transmitted: when sound travels through the air from the speaker's mouth
to the hearer's ear it does so in the form of vibrations in the air;
Auditory
Phonetics - a study of how speech sounds
are perceived: looks at the way in which the hearer’s brain decodes the sound
waves back into the vowels and consonants originally intended by the speaker.
The actual sound produced, such as a simple vowel or
consonant sound is called phone.
Closely associated with Phonetics is another branch of
Linguistics known as Phonology. Phonology deals with the way speech
sounds behave in particular languages or in languages generally. This focuses
on the way languages use differences between sounds in order to convey
differences of meaning between words. All theories of phonology hold that
spoken language can be broken down into a string of sound units (phonemes).
A phoneme is the smallest ‘distinctive unit sound’ of a language. It
distinguishes one word from another in a given language. This means changing
a phoneme in a word, produces another word, that has a different meaning. In
the pair of words (minimal pairs) 'cat' and 'bat', the
distinguishing sounds /c/ and /b/ are both phonemes. The
phoneme is an abstract term (a speech sound as it exists in the mind of the
speaker) and it is specific to a particular language.
A phoneme may have several allophones, related
sounds that are distinct but do not change the meaning of a word when they
are interchanged. The sounds corresponding to the letter "t"
in the English words 'tea' and 'trip' are not in fact quite the
same. The position of the tongue is slightly different, which causes a
difference in sound detectable by an instrument such as a speech spectrograph.
Thus the [t] in 'tea' and the [t] in 'trip' are allophones of
the phoneme /t/.
Phonology is the link between Phonetics and the rest of
Linguistics. Only by studying both the phonetics and the phonology of English
is it possible to acquire a full understanding of the use of sounds in
English speech.
English Pronunciation
We use the term ‘accents’ to refer to differences in
pronunciations. Pronunciation can vary with cultures, regions and speakers,
but there are two major standard varieties in English pronunciation: British
English and American English.
Within British English and American English there are also
a variety of accents. Some of them have received more attention than others
from phoneticians and phonologists. These are Received pronunciation (RP)* and General American (GA).
Received pronunciation is a form of pronunciation of the
English language, sometimes defined as the "educated spoken English
of southeastern England". RP is close to BBC English (the kind
spoken by British newscasters) and it is represented in the pronunciation
schemes of most British dictionaries. RP is rather a social accent than
regional, associated with the educated upper classes (and/or people who have
attended public schools) in Britain.
English pronunciation is also divided into two main accent
groups, the rhotic and the non-rhotic, depending on when the
phoneme /r/ is pronounced. Rhotic speakers pronounce written "r"
in all positions. They will pronounce the "r" in stork,
whereas non-rhotic speakers won't, making no distinction between stork
and stalk. Non-rhotic speakers pronounce "r" only if
it is followed by a vowel - right, rain, room, Robert,
far awey, etc.
Non-rhotic accents are British Received Pronunciation and
some other types of British English, Australian, New Zealand and South
African English. American English is rhotic (the "r" is
always pronounced), with the notable exception of the Boston area and New
York City. Rhotic accents can be found also in most of Canada. SE Britain is
apparently the source of non-rhotic. England is non-rhotic, apart from the south-western
England and some ever-diminishing northern areas. Scotland and Ireland are
rhotic.
* "Received" here is used in its older sense to mean "generally accepted".
The Sounds of English and Their
Representation
In English, there is no one-to-one relation between the
system of writing and the system of pronunciation. The alphabet which we use
to write English has 26 letters but in (Standard British) English there are
approximately 44 speach sounds. The number of speech sounds in English varies
from dialect to dialect, and any actual tally depends greatly on the
interpretation of the researcher doing the counting. To represent the basic
sound of spoken languages linguists use a set of phonetic symbols called the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA). The
chart below contains all of the IPA symbols used to represent the sounds of
the English language. This is the standard set of phonemic symbols for
English (RP and similar accents).
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
[
The colon / : / represents longer duration in
pronunciation and is found in long vowels such as / i: /, / a:
/, / u: /, etc.
Vowels and Consonants (en/bg)
Classifying the Vowels Sounds of
English
The classifcation of vowels is based on four major
aspects:
*In some American accents (especially Californian English), vowel sounds in words such as bait, gate, pane and boat, coat, note are not consider diphthongs. American phonologists often class them as tense monophthongs (/e/ and /o/). **/ ***A considerable amount of Americans don't have the deep /
See also:
IPA vowels chart
According to the position of the lips:
Vowel Tenseness:
Classifying the Consonants Sounds
of English According to the Manner and Place of Articulation
According to the manner of articulation (how the
breath is used) the consonants are: stops, also known as plosives, fricatives,
affricates, nasals, laterals, and approximants. Nasals,
laterals and approximants are always voiced; stops,
fricatives and affricates can be voiced or unvoiced.
According to the place of articulation (where in
the mouth or throat the sound is produced) the consonants are:
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