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  • The Sounds of Language: An Introduction to Phonetics and Phonology

    The Sounds of Language by Zsiga, Elizabeth C.;

    An Introduction to Phonetics and Phonology

    Sorozatcím: Linguistics in the World;

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    A termék adatai:

    • Kiadó Blackwell Publishers (Wiley)
    • Megjelenés dátuma 2013. január 11.

    • ISBN 9781405191043
    • Kötéstípus Keménykötés
    • Terjedelem492 oldal
    • Méret 253x198x26 mm
    • Súly 1228 g
    • Nyelv angol
    • 0

    Kategóriák

    Rövid leírás:

    The Sounds of Language is an introductory guide to the linguistic study of speech sounds, which provides uniquely balanced coverage of both phonology and phonetics.



    • Features exercises and problem sets, as well as supporting online resources at www. wiley.

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    Hosszú leírás:

    The Sounds of Language is an introductory guide to the linguistic study of speech sounds, which provides uniquely balanced coverage of both phonology and phonetics.




    The Sounds of Language is an introductory guide to the linguistic study of speech sounds, giving equal weight to both phonology and phonetics. Integrating these two disciplines allows students to appreciate the relationship of phonology and phonetics to each other, and to identify areas of overlap and mutual concern.

    Theoretically grounded, the book explores the range of data that any theory must account for, and discusses important concepts and constructs that emerge from the data, such as the interacting roles of biology and cognition in creating sound inventories, perception as distinct from hearing, contrast, alternation, and markedness. Zsiga presents a critical overview of different approaches that have been used in tackling these issues, with opportunities for students to practice data analysis and hypothesis testing. Data on sociolinguistic variation, first language acquisition, and second language learning are integrated throughout the text, along with valuable exercises, problem sets, and online data and sound files. 

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    Tartalomjegyzék:

    Preface xv

    1 The Vocal Tract 1


    1.1 Seeing the vocal tract: tools for speech research 2


    1.2 Parts of the vocal tract 5


    Chapter summary 11


    Further reading 11


    Review exercises 12


    Further analysis and discussion 13


    Go online 13


    References 13


    2 Basics of Articulation: Manner and Place in English 14


    2.1 The dance of the articulators 15


    2.2 Phonetic transcription 16


    2.3 The building blocks of speech 20


    Chapter summary 29


    Further reading 29


    Review exercises 30


    Further analysis and discussion 32


    Go online 32


    3 A Tour of the Consonants 33


    3.1 Exotic sounds and the phonetic environment 34


    3.2 Pulmonic consonants 37


    3.3 Non-pulmonic consonants 45


    3.4 Positional variation in English 48


    Chapter summary 51


    Further reading 52


    Review exercises 52


    Further analysis and discussion 53


    Go online 54


    References 54


    4 A Map of the Vowels 55


    4.1 The landscape 56


    4.2 Cardinal vowels 57


    4.3 Building inventories: dimensions of vowel quality 59


    4.4 Nasality and voice quality 66


    4.5 Length and diphthongs 67


    4.6 Tone 68


    4.7 Positional variants of the vowels of English 70


    Chapter summary 71


    Further reading 71


    Review exercises 72


    Further analysis and discussion 73


    Further research 74


    References 74


    5 Anatomy, Physiology, and Gestural Coordination 76


    5.1 Anatomy and physiology of respiration 77


    5.2 Anatomy and physiology of the larynx 79


    5.3 Anatomy of the supralaryngeal vocal tract 85


    5.4 Coordination of gestures 89


    5.5 Palatography 91


    Chapter summary 94


    Further reading 95


    Review exercises 96


    Further analysis and discussion 97


    Go online 98


    6 The Physics of Sound: Pendulums, Pebbles, and Waves 99


    6.1 What is sound? 100


    6.2 Simple harmonic motion: a pendulum and a tuning fork 102


    6.3 Adding sinuosoids: complex waves 105


    6.4 Sound propagation 108


    6.5 Decibels 110


    6.6 Resonance 111


    6.7 The vocal tract as a sound-producing device: source-filter theory 114


    Chapter summary 116


    Further reading 116


    Review exercises 117


    Further analysis and discussion 118


    Go online 118


    7 Looking at Speech: Waveforms, Spectra, and Spectrograms 119


    7.1 Pre-digital speech 120


    7.2 Digitization 122


    7.3 Looking at waveforms 129


    7.4 Spectra 131


    7.5 Spectrograms 137


    Chapter summary 142


    Further reading 143


    Review exercises 144


    Further analysis and discussion 144


    Go online 148


    References 148


    8 Speech Analysis: Under the Hood 149


    8.1 Building sounds up 150


    8.2 Breaking sounds down 160


    Chapter summary 169


    Further reading 170


    Review exercises 170


    Further analysis and discussion 171


    Go online 172


    References 172


    9 Hearing and Speech Perception 173


    9.1 Anatomy and physiology of the ear 174


    9.2 Neuro-anatomy 181


    9.3 Speech perception 186


    Chapter summary 194


    Further reading 195


    Review exercises 195


    Further analysis and discussion 196


    Go online 197


    References 197


    10 Phonology 1: Abstraction, Contrast, Predictability 198


    10.1 The necessity of abstraction 199


    10.2 Contrast and predictability: phonemes and allophones 203


    10.3 Some complicating factors 211


    10.4 Biuniqueness, Behaviorism, and the decline of phonemic analysis 214


    Chapter summary 216


    Further reading 216


    Review exercises 216


    Further analysis and discussion 217


    Further research 219


    Go online 219


    References 219


    11 Phonotactics and Alternations 221


    11.1 Phonotactic constraints 222


    11.2 Analyzing alternations 225


    11.3 Alternations: what to expect 232


    Chapter summary 246


    Further reading 246


    Review exercises 246


    Further analysis and discussion 248


    Go online 250


    References 250


    12 What Is Possible Language?: Distinctive Features 253


    12.1 Introduction 254


    12.2 Distinctive features 257


    12.3 How have our hypotheses fared? 270


    Chapter summary 271


    Further reading 272


    Review exercises 272


    Further analysis and discussion 272


    Further research 274


    Go online 274


    References 274


    13 Rules and Derivations in Generative Grammar 275


    13.1 Generative grammars 276


    13.2 Underlying representations 277


    13.3 Writing rules 279


    13.4 Autosegmental representations and feature geometry 284


    13.5 How have our hypotheses fared? 298


    Chapter summary 299


    Further reading 299


    Review exercises 300


    Further analysis and discussion 300


    Further research 303


    Go online 303


    References 303


    14 Constraint-based Phonology 304


    14.1 Constraints and rules in linguistic theory 305


    14.2 The basics of Optimality Theory 309


    14.3 Example problem solving in OT 314


    14.4 Challenges and directions for future research 322


    Chapter summary 324


    Further reading 325


    Review exercises 325


    Further analysis and discussion 325


    Further research 329


    Go online 329


    References 329


    15 Syllables and Prosodic Domains 330


    15.1 Syllables 331


    15.2 The prosodic hierarchy 341


    Chapter summary 348


    Further reading 348


    Review exercises 349


    Further analysis and discussion 350


    Further research 000


    References 351


    16 Stress 353


    16.1 What is linguistic stress? 354


    16.2 Cross-linguistic typology 356


    16.3 A feature for stress? 360


    16.4 Metrical structure 360


    16.5 Stress in English 365


    Chapter summary 370


    Further reading 371


    Review exercises 371


    Further analysis and discussion 372


    Further research 374


    Go online 374


    References 374


    17 Tone and Intonation 375


    17.1 Tone 376


    17.2 Intonation 392


    Chapter summary 397


    Further reading 397


    Review exercises 398


    Further analysis and discussion 399


    Further research 399


    Go online 400


    References 400


    18 Diachronic Change 401


    18.1 Languages change 402


    18.2 Historical reconstruction 408


    18.3 History of the sounds of English 415


    Chapter summary 422


    Further reading 422


    Review exercises 423


    Further analysis and discussion 423


    Further research 423


    Go online 425


    References 425


    19 Variation 426


    19.1 Variation by place 428


    19.2 Other sources of variation 437


    19.3 Formalizing variation 441


    Chapter summary 444


    Further reading 445


    Review exercises 445


    Further analysis and discussion 446


    Further research 446


    Go online 446


    References 446


    20 Acquisition and Learning 447


    20.1 Language Acquisition and Language Learning 448


    20.2 Child language acquisition: the data 448


    20.3 Theories of L1 acquisition 454


    20.4 L2 Learning 457


    20.5 Acquisition, Learning, and Linguistic Theory 461


    Chapter summary 462


    Further reading 462


    Review exercises 462


    Further analysis and discussion 464


    Further research 464


    Go online 464


    References 464


    Index 465

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