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Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014
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Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

Jan 15, 2016

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Hollie Berry
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Page 1: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

Fricatives + Voice Onset Time

March 31, 2014

Page 2: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

In the Year 2000• Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives…

• and then move on to stops.

• This Friday, there will be one final transcription exercise.

• On Bengali, Quebecois French, and Arabic.

• I just posted it right before class.

Page 3: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

Acoustic Enhancement• Note: is post-alveolar and [s] is alveolar

• more space in vocal tract in front of

• including a “sub-lingual cavity”

• This “filter” of resonates at lower frequencies

• In English, this acoustic distinction is enhanced through lip rounding for

• this extends the vocal tract

• further lowers the resonant frequencies of

Page 4: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

The Sub-lingual Cavity

•Let’s check the videotape...

Page 5: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

Behind the Constriction

[s]

• Let’s check the ultrasound…

Page 6: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

Other Examples• Susie and David say “speech”:

• Also: Where the shtreets have no name

• And: Tina Fey

• Note: there are no word-initial /sr/ sequences in English.

• “shriek” *“sreek”

Page 7: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

Polish• Note: lip-rounding can be used to enhance other fricative contrasts

• In Polish, it enhances the contrast between (post-)alveolar and dental fricatives

• the (post-)alveolars have the rounding

Page 8: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

Polish, continued• Polish also has what are known as alveolo-palatal fricatives.

• = constriction in the post-alveolar region

• + raised tongue in the palatal region (behind the fricative)

Page 9: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

Polish Sibilants

Page 10: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

vs.

Page 11: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

Palatography

[kasa]

Page 12: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

Palatography

Page 13: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

Polish Clusters• Just for kicks...

Page 14: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

Four Fricatives

Page 15: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

Mandarin Sibilants• Mandarin Chinese also has dental, post-alveolar and alveolo-palatal sibilant fricatives.

• The post-alveolars are sometimes retroflex

Page 16: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

Mandarin

Page 17: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

Before I forget…• There are two remaining fricative symbols in the IPA that we have yet to learn.

2. In Swedish, there is a fricative which combines the articulations of post-alveolar and velar [x]:

1. Some dialects of English still have a voiceless labio-velar fricative (a voiceless /w/):

Page 18: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

Affricates

• Affricates are transcribed as stop-fricative sequences

• Acoustically, amplitude rises faster in affricates than in plain fricatives

• “rise time”

• Phonologically, affricates are [-continuant]

Page 19: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

Affricate Typology• More numbers from the UPSID database:

• 522 affricates in 316 languages

• 141

• [ts] 95

• 80

• [dz] 30

• 485 affricates have sibilant fricatives

• Other affricate types are rarer:

• [pf] (German) [tx] (Navajo)

Page 20: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

Fricative vs. Affricate

“shy”

“chime”

Page 21: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

Polish, Again

• Polish contrasts affricates with stop + fricative sequences

Page 22: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

Stop + Fricative vs. Affricate

Page 23: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

Fricative Acoustics Summary• Turbulence provides the source of fricative noise

• Voiced fricatives also have a sound source at the glottis

• Obstacle turbulence tends to be louder than channel turbulence

• Sibilants are particulary high in intensity

• The filter of fricative turbulence noise changes depending on the place of articulation

• sibilants: very short filter, emphasizing high frequencies

• labials: essentially no filter (flat spectrum)

• back fricatives: longer, more vowel-like filter

• Affricates: stop-fricative sequences with shorter rise time

Page 24: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

Review: Stops and Voicing• Stops

• Three stages: close, maintain, release

• Pressure build-up behind closure

• “Release Burst”

• Voicing

• Vocal folds are lightly brought together (adducted)

• Sub-glottal pressure higher than supra-glottal pressure

• Airflow through glottis causes cycle of vocal fold opening and closing

• Voiceless: k > t > p Voiced: b > d > g

Page 25: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

It’s not that simple• The voicing of stops is difficult, so the contrast between

voiced and voiceless stops often takes a different form

• Making use of a different property: aspiration

• An aspirated stop has the following timing:

1. Stop closure is made

2. Airflow builds up pressure behind closure

3. Closure is released (with a “burst”)

4. Air flows unimpeded through glottis (“aspiration”)

5. Vocal folds close; voicing begins

Page 26: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

An Aspirated Stop: [phœt]

release burst

aspiration

voicing (vowel) [t] closure [t] release burst

Page 27: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

An Unaspirated Stop: [pœt]

release burst voicing (vowel)

Page 28: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

A Voiced Stop: [byt]release burst

voicing (vowel)voicing (closure)

Page 29: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

Voice Onset Time• Voice Onset Time (VOT) is defined as the length of time between the release of a stop closure and the onset of voicing.

• For aspirated stops--voicing begins after the release, so:

• VOT 50 - 150 milliseconds

• For unaspirated stops--voicing begins at the release, so:

• VOT 0 - 20 milliseconds

• For voiced stops--voicing begins before the release, so:

• VOT < 0 milliseconds

(VOT can be negative)

Page 30: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

Thai Stops• In stressed onset position, English distinguishes between:

• unaspirated and aspirated stops.

• Languages like French, Dutch and Spanish distinguish between:

• voiced and voiceless unaspirated stops.

• Thai splits up the VOT continuum into three parts:

• voiced, voiceless unaspirated, voiceless aspirated

Page 31: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

Thai Stops

Page 32: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

[ba]

[pa]

Page 33: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

English Stop Contrasts1. In onset position:

• /p/ is voiceless aspirated

• /b/ is voiceless unaspirated

2. In medial position (between voiced segments):

• /p/ is voiceless unaspirated

• /b/ is voiced

3. After /s/, in the same syllable:

• only voiceless unaspirated stops (no contrast)

Page 34: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

Beak, Peak, Speak

Page 35: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

Rabid vs. Rapid

Page 36: Fricatives + Voice Onset Time March 31, 2014 In the Year 2000 Today: we’ll wrap up fricatives… and then move on to stops. This Friday, there will be.

English Stop Contrasts4. In syllable-final position:

• vowels preceding /p/ are short

• vowels preceding /b/ are longer

• /p/ closure tends to be longer than /b/ closure

• Moral of the story:

• Phonological voiced vs. voiceless contrast in English is abstract

• It may exhibit different phonetic manifestations

• Phonemes vs. Allophones