Chapter 2 Flashcards
Phonetics
The study of the minimal units of language (e.g. the sounds of spoken language.)
Articulatory Phonetics
Subfield of phonetics concerned with the production of speech sounds.
Acoustic Phonetics
Subfield of phonetics concerned with the physical characteristics of the sounds of speech.
Auditory Phonetics
Subfield of phonetics concerned with the perception of speech sounds.
Segments
The individual units of the speech stream; segments can be further subdivided into consonants and vowels.
Suprasegmentals
A phonetic characteristic of speech sounds, such as length, intonation, tone, or stress, that “rides on top of
segmental features. Must usually be identified by comparison to the same feature on other sounds or strings of sounds.
Nucleus
The core element of a syllable, carrying stress, length, and pitch (tone). It usually consists of a vowel or a syllabic consonant.
Coda
In a syllable, any consonant(s) that occur in the rhyme, after the nucleus.
Onset
In a syllable, any consonant(s) that occurs before the rhyme.
Rhyme
In a syllable, the vowel and any consonants that follow it.
Running Speech
The usual form of spoken language, with all the words and phrases run together, without pauses in between them. Sometimes called continuous speech.
Airstream Mechanism
Any of the various ways to produce a stream of moving air through the vocal tract for the production of speech sounds. Some major mechanisms are pulmonic, glottalic, and velar; each may be produced with an egressive or an ingressive airstream.
Fricative
Sound made by forming a nearly complete obstruction of the airstream so that when air passes through the small passage, turbulent airflow is produced
Liquids
Consonant sound produced by an obstruction of airflow that is less narrow than that of stops or fricatives, but more narrow than that of glides.
Affricates
Sound produced by complete obstruction of the airflow followed by a slight release of the obstruction, allowing frication. An affricate can be thought of as a combination of a stop and a fricative.