Sound Structure of Language Flashcards

1
Q

Design feature of Human Spoken Language

A

Large vocabulary, open vocabulary, Variation (accents, different languages), Messages are sequence of vocabulary

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2
Q

Design feature of other primates

A

Small vocabulary, closed vocabulary, System is fixed (no variation across different regions), Messages are single items

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3
Q

Similarities

A

Communicate individual identity and emotions through vocalizations

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4
Q

Advantages

A

Easy naming of new things, learning language is a big social investment, signs to symbolize different abstract concepts

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5
Q

Pronunciation learning problem

A

If every word were an arbitrary pattern of sound this would be a huge problem, recognizing how to pronounce each word correctly

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6
Q

Phonological principle

A

Solves problem

Pronunciation relies on structure of smaller elements of a word put together, these elements are the same for all words

Phonological system is defined by patterns of mouth and noises; phonetic interpretation is same for all words

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7
Q

How does phonological principle work?

A

Phonological representations are made up of discrete elements that can be taught to others exactly and that has a uniform definition depending on context

Phonetic interpretation is general and does not depend of words; everyone contributes to phonetic interpretation by saying words with certain meanings

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8
Q

Phonemes

A

Any of the perceptually distinct units of sound in a specified language that distinguish one word from another

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9
Q

Basic sound production in vocal tract

A

Buzz (vibrating vocal chords), Hiss (air passing through), Pop (closure released)

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10
Q

Laryngeal buzz

A

Air pressure forces opening and if the flow is continuous enough the vibrations oscillate and emit a periodic sound

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11
Q

Hiss of turbulent flow

A

hiss generated when a volume of air is forced through a passage that is too small to permit it to flow smoothly; frication

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12
Q

The pop of closure and release

A

pressure is built up behind the constriction. If the constriction is abruptly released, the sudden release of pressure creates a sort of a pop; stop or plosive (release)

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13
Q

Mouth in language

A

Different positions of the tongue and lips make the difference between one vowel sound and another

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14
Q

Syllables

A

repetitive cycles of opening and closing the vocal tract

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15
Q

Syllable onset

A

vocal tract in a relatively closed position

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16
Q

Syllable nucelus

A

open portion of syllable; degree of vocal tract openness correlates with the loudness of the sound that can be made

17
Q

Sonority

A

vowels at one end and stop consonants on the other; least sonorous sounds are restricted to the margins of the syllable – the onset in the simplest case – and the most sonorous sounds occur in the center of the syllable

18
Q

Glides

A

almost exactly like vowels, except for their syllabic position making them consonants (j for y) and (w for w)

19
Q

Bell’s Visible Speech

A

writing system to be a teaching and learning tool for helping deaf students learn spoken language; first system for notating the sounds of speech independent of the choice of particular language; widely used in teaching students how to speak with a standard accent

20
Q

International Phonetic Association (IPA)

A

Founded in Paris, now used more descriptive but sometimes to teach how to pronounce

21
Q

IPA table

A

columns are labelled by positions of constriction (bilabial, dental - lips & teeth); rows are labelled by the type of manner of constriction (plosive, fricative)

22
Q

Mawukakan

A

Mawu has a simple syllable structure (ko, koo, or kwo); Mawu is also a tone language, in the sense that words are distinguished according to their pitch patterns