WEEK 3
PHONETIC AND PHONOLOGICAL CONTRASTIVE
                                               ANALYSES
I. Phonetics or Phonology?
   1. What do ‘type’ and ‘token’ refer to?
       A type is a class of linguistic items, e.g. phonemes, words, utterances.
    A token is an example or a physical manifestation of a class.
   For example, hello, hi, good morning are three different tokens of the text or discourse type “Greeting” in phatic
   communication or phatic communication. There are nine letter-tokens in the word phonology (i.e. there are
   nine physical manifestations of each of the different letters of the English alphabet that appear in the word
   phonology), but there are only seven letter-types (different letters) in the word phonology.
   2. Fill this table with ‘Phonetics’ or ‘Phonology’ in the gaps.
                     PHONETICS                                                     PHONOLOGY
        ‘studies human speech sounds in                           ‘studies the specific speech sounds as
         general, that is, the type of speech                       employed in different languages, i.e. the
         sounds’ (p. 47)                                            tokens of human speech sounds’ (p. 48)
        ‘studies how people physically produce                    ‘studies how speech sounds are
         and perceive different sounds to create                    structured and combined to create
         speech’                                                    meaning in words, phrases and
        Contrastive Phonetics involves ‘making                     sentences’
         detailed descriptions of the sounds                       Contrastive Phonology involves
          of a pair of languages and then                           ‘investigat[ing] and then compar[ing] the
         somehow equating certain of these                          specific functions comparable sounds
         sounds interlingually for purposes of                      (phonemes) in different languages
         comparison.’ (p. 48)                                       perform in their own sound systems.’ (p.
                                                                    48)
II. Contrastive Phonetics
 The big picture 1: What are the three aspects of the reality of sound? Provide a short explanation for
    each of them.
*Three realities of sound:
     + Physiological
     + Physical
     + Psychology
*These three different realities of sound are respectively the objects of investigation of three different
branches of phonetics: articulatory phonetics, acoustic phonetics, and auditory phonetics.
+ Articulatory Phonetics (Physiological aspects): deals with the way in which speech sounds
are produced.
+ Acoustic Phonetics: concerned with the trip speech sounds make to reach our ears => the physical
properties of sound.
+ Auditory Phonetics: concerned with how speech sounds are perceived by the listener => the
psychological properties of sound
 A closer look (Challenge: Can you find the Vietnamese equivalents for all the terms in this
    chapter?)
    1. Articulatory Phonetics (Physiological aspects)
            a. What are the vocal organs/ speech organs/ articulators?
Vocal organs/speech organs/articulators produce the sounds of language comprise: chest muscles,
diaphragm, lungs, larynx, vocal cords, glottis, pharynx, epiglottis, esophagus or oesophagus, uvula,
soft palate (velum), hard palate, tongue, alveolar ridge, teeth, lips, mandible
            b. Based on the descriptions of the vocal organs on pp. 49-50 and their visual illustration in
                  Fig. 3.1 (p. 50), what types of sound are missing from the list of places of articulation (1-
                  9) in Fig. 3.1?
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           c. Summarise the process of voice production (e.g. with a diagram).
           d.
           Based on what you have learned in previous modules about manners of articulation, what
                types of sound have not been mentioned on p. 52?
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           e. What vowels and/or consonants in English do you think are often mispronounced due to
                L1 interference? Briefly explain how.
                 The problem sound is /dʒ/.
                 Reasons:
                 This sound doesn’t exist in L1 (Vietnamese).
                 Students may confuse this sound with the sound /tʃ/
                 This is a consonant cluster.
                 Ss may drop this sound because it is at the final position.
   2. Acoustic Phonetics (Physical aspects)
           a. What are the three physical properties of sound? Briefly explain each of them.
• Frequency:
  + The frequency at which a sound vibrates determines the pitch of a sound.
  + The basic frequency (fundamental frequency): F0
• Amplitude of Vibration:
       The extent to which an air particle moves to and fro around its rest point.
• Timbre
   + Characteristics of a particular voice that enable the listener to distinguish one voice from another
   + When a sound is produced by an object vibrating in a periodic way => multiples of the
   fundamental frequency
   (overtones/harmonics)
    Vowels: musical sounds
    Voiced consonant:musical sounds tinged with some noises
    Voiceless consonant: noises
   3. Auditory Phonetics (Psychological aspects)
              a. How is a ‘phoneme’ different from an ‘allophone’?
   -      allophones : different forms of a phoneme
   -      phoneme: the smallest unit of sound in a language which can distinguish two words
              b. Fill in the table with key points
                             BROAD TRANSCRIPTION                         NARROW TRANSCRIPTION
                                   (PHONEMIC)                                   (PHONETIC)
  DEFINITION     Phonemic transcription/notation                Phonetic/allophonic
                     Transcribe only the more noticeable             transcription/notation
                      phonetic features                              Describe phonetic variations of
                     A representation of the phonemic                specific allophones
                      structure (phonology) of a language            A transcription of the phonetics of a
                                                                      language
                 Examples: /t/ /d/ /m/ /n/                                Examples:
 ADVANTAGES
                                                                 More accurate description of the
                 Suitable for providing pronunciation
                                                                 phonetic system of a language =>
                 data in
                                                                 students learn exactly the right sound
                 foreign language dictionaries
     DIS-             Cannot reflect the dialectal variations         - Rarely representative of all speakers
 ADVANTAGES           of a                                            - Involves a larger number of
                      language’s phonetic system                      unfamiliar
                                                                      symbols
III. Contrastive Phonology
   4. Fill in the table below with key points about the two models.
                       TAXONOMIC/ STRUCTURAL PHONOLOGY                                  GENERATIVE PHONOLOGY
  DEFINITION        + The taxonomic or structural phonology is              + Generative phonology stems from America
                    characterized by an effort at classifying items         (Chomsky and Halle, 1968) but is rooted in
                    into classes and then sub-classes.
             + The distinctive speech sounds of a language        European phonological theory of the 1940s.
             are first classified as vowels and consonants; the   + Assumption: the surface-structure phonology
             consonants are then classified as stops,             is derived from the deep-structure phonology by
             fricatives, nasals, etc.; the stops may be further   means of transformations.
             classified as voiced and voiceless
             and so on.
ADVANTAGES
             Work pretty well on the whole
   DIS-      -Failure in CA: inability to to differentiate          - Failure in CA: the phonological deep
ADVANTAGES   productive difficulty from receptive difficulty.       structure is assumed to contain
             - Assumption: what is difficult to perceive by the     forms which are deleted from the surface
             learner will in fact be difficult for him to           representation.
             produce. <= not always the case
            For CA, taxonomic phonology is more practical & concrete
   5. ‘The important point to be made in this context is that objectively similar sounds of two
       languages can have different functional statuses; in L1 the differences may be disregarded and
       the two speech sounds viewed as “the same,” while in L2 the same objective difference is
       upheld as constituting a functional difference.’ (p. 58)  Can you think of an example in
       Vietnamese-English?
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   6. What is ‘functional load’? What features can be said to have high functional load in
       Vietnamese?
   -   Functional load: the relative importance of linguistic contrasts in a language.
         Example:
         • Voiced/voiceless contrast has a high functional load in English
         • Aspirated/unaspirated contrast of consonants in Chinese
   7. What is a ‘phonemic error’? Give one example.
A phonemic error occurs when a person produces a sound that is a well-formed phoneme of the
language but not one that was intended by the speaker or anticipated by the listener, as in examples
a and b:
      a) They have a smole ‘smile’ (smole rhymes with mole)
      b) … coming out of the gar ‘jar’ (gar rhymes with bar)
   8. What is an ‘allophonic error’? Give one example.
IV. Suprasegmental Contrastive Analysis
 The big picture 2: What features of phonetic structure do ‘suprasegmentals’ comprise? Briefly
   explain each feature.
   Suprasegmentals (also called prosodies or prosodic features) : aspects or features of phonetic
   structure above the level of individual sounds, such as tempo, stress, pitch, and juncture.
   -   Tempo:
       Tempo (also known as speech rate expressed in words per minute or syllables per second), e.g.
       is conditioned by pause rate (slower speech involves more pausing), or by variations in
       articulation rate (the speed with which the syllables themselves are produced, regardless of
       pauses in between the words), or by both, and affects a series of utterances or a stretch of
       discourse.
   -   Stress
   -   Pitch:
       Pitch: the height of speech sounds perceived by a listener.
       => In suprasegmental phonology: Tone & Intonation
   -   Juncture:
       + A pause or other phonological feature or modification of a phonological feature, such as the
       lengthening of a preceding phoneme or the strengthening of a following one, marking a
       transition or break between sounds, especially marking the phonological boundary of a word,
       clause, or sentence.
       + The point in a word or group of words at which such a pause or other junctural marker occurs.
 A closer look:
   9. Which of the features you identify in the question above does the author explore in more
       detail?
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   10. What are the two elements of pitch mentioned in this chapter? Provide a short definition for
       each.
   a) Tone: the height of pitch and a unit of change of pitch which is associated with the
       pronunciation of syllables or words and which affects the meaning of the word.
       Tone is a distinctive feature in tone languages such as Vietnamese, Chinese and Thai
       => the meaning of a word depends on the tone used
       Tonal contasts in Vietnamese make phonemic distinction.
   b) Intonation (pitch movement): the change of pitch to convey grammatical or attitudinal
       information rather than vocabulary differences.
   11. What do you know about the tones in Vietnamese?
Tonal contasts in Vietnamese make phonemic distinction.
Example: A French speaker might say “Xin cháo” instead of “Xin chào”
=> Pronunciation errors resulting from phonemic asymmetries
   12. What are the main functions of intonation? Give one example for each function.
   -   Perform grammatical functions (for instance, to show whether an utterance is a statement or a
       question)
       Ex:
   -   Give additional information to that given by the words of an utterance.
       Ex:
   -   Indicate the speaker’s attitude to the matter discussed or to the listener.
       Ex:
   13. What do ‘stress-timed language’ and ‘syllable-timed language’ mean? Which type do you think
       Vietnamese can be classified as? Why?
   -   A syllable-stressed language where the timing of all syllables tends to be the same, regardless of
       their stress.
   -   A stress-timed language, which means the length of time between any two neighboring stressed
       syllables is roughly the same, no matter how many unstressed syllables occur in between.
   14. What is ‘juncture’?
       + A pause or other phonological feature or modification of a phonological feature, such as the
       lengthening of a preceding phoneme or the strengthening of a following one, marking a
      transition or break between sounds, especially marking the phonological boundary of a word,
      clause, or sentence.
      + The point in a word or group of words at which such a pause or other junctural marker occurs.
   15. What might be the intentions of the author in introducing machine translation while discussing
      juncture?
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   16. Read some news headlines in Vietnamese and English. Which headlines contain ‘alternative
      structures’?
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