
- •2. Phonetics and its branches.
- •3. Phonetics and a speech sound. Human speech and its stages.
- •4. Language and speech.
- •5. The theoretical and practical aspects of Phonetics.
- •The notion of the phoneme. The phoneme and its main aspects.
- •Relationship between the phoneme and its allophones.
- •The main trends in phoneme theory.
- •1.The notion of the phoneme. The phoneme and its allophones.
- •2.Relationship between the phoneme and its allophones.
- •3. The main trends in phoneme theory.
- •1. The three parts of Phonology as corresponding to the three levels of Linguistic analysis.
- •2. The distributional method in phonology
- •3. The semantic method in phonology
- •Lecture 4.
- •2. Paradigmatic and syntagmatic approaches as the principle aspects of phonological system.
- •3. Synchronic, diachronic and socio-linguistic factors in phonological system.
- •The phonetic structure of a language.
- •1) Type of obstruction;
- •2) Place of obstruction and the active organ of speech;
- •3) Force of articulation.
- •4. The position of the soft palate.
- •1. The place of noise.
- •2. The manner of articulation.
- •2. Constrictive;
- •3. Occlusive-constrictive (affricates);
- •4. Rolled;
- •3. The place of articulation.
- •1. Labial;
- •2. Lingual;
- •3. Glottal;
- •3. Differences in the Articulation Bases of English and Russian Consonants and their Peculiarities
- •It is a reference point which is fixed and unchanged, established within the total range of vowel quality to which any other vowel sound can be directly related.
- •2. Classification of English vowels.
- •1. Classification of the vowels according to the position of the tongue.
- •2. Classification of English vowels according to the position of the lips.
- •3. Classification of English vowels according to length.
- •4. Classification of English vowels according to the degree of tenseness.
- •3. Stability of articulation. English diphthongs.
- •Articulatory Transitions
- •Peculiarities of the cc, cv, vc, VV Articulatory Transitions in English and in Russian
- •Unstressed Vocalism
- •Lecture 8 the principle types of english pronunciation. The teaching norm. Rp and ga
- •Diphthongs
- •Lecture 9.
- •2. Types of Syllables.
- •3. Syllable Formation and Syllable Division.
- •Scale of Sonority
- •4. Vocoids and contoids.
- •2. Types of word stress. Factors, kinds and degrees of word stress.
- •Qualitative type of stress is achieved through the changes in the quality of the vowel under stress.
- •Recessive tendency, 2. Rhythmic tendency, 3.Retentive tendency and 4. Semantic factor.
- •3.Rules of word stress. Stress in compounds.
- •Verb noun adjective
- •4. The functional aspect of word stress.
- •5. Strong and weak forms. Degrees of reduction.
- •6 Sentence stress.
- •2. The structural elements of prosody.
- •3. Intonation Patterns.
- •4. Fundamental Intonation Patterns and their Use.
- •2. Extralinguistic situation and its main constituents:
- •3. The problem of classification of phonetic styles.
- •2. Academic style.
- •Publicistic style.
- •4. Informational style.
- •5. Declamatory style.
- •Список вопросов к экзамену/зачету по теоретической фонетике.
- •Задания для самостоятельной работы
- •2. Declamatory style:
- •Plan of phonostylistic analysis.
2. Types of Syllables.
Words can be divided in writing according to their syllable structure, e.g. un-kind-li-ness. They can also be divided according to their meaning, e.g. spot-light.
In English a syllable can be formed by a vowel (V), by a vowel and a consonant (VC), by a consonant and a sonorant (CS).
V-type of syllable called uncovered open,
VC-type of syllable called uncovered closed,
CVC-type of syllable called covered closed,
CV –type of syllable called covered open.
G.P.Torsuyev suggests a differentiation of the following types of syllabic structures:
V-type – fully open,
CVC-type – fully closed,
CV-type – initially covered,
VC-type – finally covered.
We can talk about the following varieties of types of syllables in the English language:
V-type – oh,
CVC-type – pit,
CVCC-type – fact,
CVCCC-type - lapsed,
CCVC-type - plan,
CCCVC-type – spleen,
CCVCC-type – twist,
CCVCCC-type – stamps,
CVCCC-type – texts,
CV-type – dew,
CCV-type – spy,
CCCV-type – straw,
VC-type – eat,
VCC-type – act,
VCCC-type – asks.
The sonorants [w,r,j] function as consonants, because they occur only before vowels: SVC structural type, e.g.: with, write, yes.
The sonorants [l, m,n] can form syllables in terminal position, when preceded by a noise consonant, e.g.: people, garden, often, nation.
The structural patterns of syllables formed by sonorants with a preceding consonant in English are similar to V+C pattern.
3. Syllable Formation and Syllable Division.
There are different points of view on syllable formation, which are briefly the following:
The Egyptian theory states that there are as many syllables in a word as there are vowels. This theory is primitive and insufficient since it does not take into consideration consonants which also can form syllables in some languages, neither does it explain the boundary of syllable.
The expiratory theory states that there are as many syllables in a word as there are expiration pulses. The borderline between the syllables is, according to this theory, the moment of the weakest expiration. This theory is inconsistent because it is quite possible to pronounce several syllables in one articulatory effort or expiration, e.g. seeing.
The sonority theory states that there are as many syllables in a word as there are peaks of prominence or sonority.
O.Jespersen established the scale of sonority of sounds, that is, the scale of their inherent prominence. According to this scale the most sonorous are back vowels (low, mid, high), then go semi-vowels and sonorants, then – voiced and voiceless consonants.
Scale of Sonority
low vowels 5. sonorants
mid vowels 6. voiced constructive consonants
high vowels 7. voiced plosive consonants
semi-vowels 8. voiceless constructive consonants and affricates
9. voiceless plosive consonants
Sounds are grouped around the most sonorous ones, which form the peaks of sonority in a syllable. Two points of lower sonority constitute the beginning and the end of one syllable.
Compare melt and metal: in the first word /e/ is the most sonorous sound, the only peak of sonority; it is a one-syllable word. In the word metal there are two peaks of sonority /e/ and /i/, it is a two-syllable word.
A syllable can be defined as a phonetic unit, which is pronounced by one articulatory effort accompanied by one muscular contraction, which results acoustically and auditorily in one uninterrupted arc of loudness.
The experiments carried out by N.Zhinkin showed that it is the pharynx, which is responsible for the variations in the loudness of the syllable. Perceptually the peak, or the crest of the syllable, is louder and higher in pitch than the slopes.
On the acoustic level it is characterized by a higher intensity than the slopes, and in many cases by a higher fundamental frequency.
None of the theories mentioned above are reliable in the definition of the syllabic boundary.
Electroacoustic analysis makes it possible to formulate the following rules of syllable division in English:
1. In affixal words the syllabic boundary coincides with the morphological boundary: dis-place, be-come, un-able, count-less.
2. In words with CVC structure the syllabic boundary is after the long accented vowel: far-mer;
3. In words of CVCV structure the syllabic boundary is within the intervocal consonant, which terminates the short accented syllabic: cit-y, pit-y.
4. In words of CVSVS structure the syllabic boundary is within the intervocal sonorant: cin-e-ma, en-e-my.
5. English diphthongs are unisyllabic, they consist of one vowel phoneme, English triphthongs are disyllabic, because they consist of two vowel phonemes: science, flower.
Syllables in writing are called syllabographs and are closely connected with the morphemic structure of words.
Words can be divided in writing according to their syllabic structure, e.g. un-kind-li-ness. They can also be divided according to their meaning, e.g. spot-light.
There are 5 rules to help with dividing a word in writing:
Never divide a word of one syllable;
Never divide an ending (a suffix) of two syllables such as –able, -ably, -fully;
With the exception of –ly, never divide a word so that an ending of two letters such as –ed, -er, -ic begins the next line;
Never divide a word so that one of the parts is a single letter;
Never divide a word of less than five letters.