Transcript
Page 1: 1 DIPHTHONGS English Phonetics and Phonology Lesson 5A

1

DIPHTHONGS

English Phonetics and Phonology

Lesson 5A

Page 2: 1 DIPHTHONGS English Phonetics and Phonology Lesson 5A

2

2 AVVISI

Nostra lezone di Lunedi 10-12 spostata nell’aula T12A

Gruppo 1C (avanzato)corso First Certificate Martedi 16-18T34 McGowan

Page 3: 1 DIPHTHONGS English Phonetics and Phonology Lesson 5A

3

fear go house I pain pear tour toy

here know how my play there pour voice

beer home down either cave where choice

hear bone loud eye reign air

clear sew sigh made heir

dear crow thai maid wear

Don’t tie obey

foam pay

foe

Page 4: 1 DIPHTHONGS English Phonetics and Phonology Lesson 5A

4

TRIPHTHONGS

/ei/ + schwa

/ai /+ schwa

/au/ + schwa

/oi/ + schwa

schwa + /u/ + schwa

player fire hour royal lower

liar power

Page 5: 1 DIPHTHONGS English Phonetics and Phonology Lesson 5A

5

Minimal pairs

Beware of heard a dreadful word

that looks like beard and sounds

like bird

Page 6: 1 DIPHTHONGS English Phonetics and Phonology Lesson 5A

6

While the position of the tongue is more or less stable for a pure vowel…

Page 7: 1 DIPHTHONGS English Phonetics and Phonology Lesson 5A

7

… a diphthong is characterised by a graceful movement from one point to another, for this reason they are also sometimes known as glides.

Page 8: 1 DIPHTHONGS English Phonetics and Phonology Lesson 5A

8

This is also visible on a spectrogram: this is the pure vowel /a/…

Page 9: 1 DIPHTHONGS English Phonetics and Phonology Lesson 5A

9

…and this is the diphthong //. Notice how the formants (the dark bands) seperate towards the end.

Page 10: 1 DIPHTHONGS English Phonetics and Phonology Lesson 5A

10

English diphthongs may cause Italian speakers difficulty for two main reasons:

Italian has four diphthongs (I think!) while English has eight. All the Italian diphthongs have equivalents in English which are not the same but which are reasonably similar

Nowhere is the English spelling system more bizarre than in its representation of diphthongs

Page 11: 1 DIPHTHONGS English Phonetics and Phonology Lesson 5A

11

If one has a clear idea of where pure vowels are articulated on the quadrilateral then interpreting the diphthong symbols is not difficult.

Page 12: 1 DIPHTHONGS English Phonetics and Phonology Lesson 5A

12

Technically, English diphthongs are divided into two groups:

Closing diphthongs – which tend to move from an open to a close position, these roughly correspond to Italian sounds

Centring diphthongs – which tend towards a central position

Page 13: 1 DIPHTHONGS English Phonetics and Phonology Lesson 5A

13

First we will look at the closing group…

Page 14: 1 DIPHTHONGS English Phonetics and Phonology Lesson 5A

14

… the ‘pay’, ‘ made’, ‘maid’, ‘reign’, ‘obey’, sound:

Page 15: 1 DIPHTHONGS English Phonetics and Phonology Lesson 5A

15

Then we have the ‘I’, ‘my’, ‘tie’, ‘sigh’, ‘either’, ‘eye’, ‘Thai’, sound:

Page 16: 1 DIPHTHONGS English Phonetics and Phonology Lesson 5A

16

Then there is ‘boy’, ‘choice’:

Page 17: 1 DIPHTHONGS English Phonetics and Phonology Lesson 5A

17

Then ‘down’, ‘loud’:

Page 18: 1 DIPHTHONGS English Phonetics and Phonology Lesson 5A

18

To end the closing group, the most common diphthong in English, that of ‘no’, ‘know’,‘bone’, ‘foam’, ‘sew’, ‘though’, ‘don’t’, ‘foe’, ‘crow’:

Page 19: 1 DIPHTHONGS English Phonetics and Phonology Lesson 5A

19

To start with the centring group, we have the most common, that of ‘clear’, ‘deer’, ‘here’, ‘wier’:

Page 20: 1 DIPHTHONGS English Phonetics and Phonology Lesson 5A

20

Then ‘air’, ‘where’, wear’, ‘care’, ‘heir’:

Page 21: 1 DIPHTHONGS English Phonetics and Phonology Lesson 5A

21

Finally, there is a diphthong which is quite rare - ‘tour’, ‘poor’:

Page 22: 1 DIPHTHONGS English Phonetics and Phonology Lesson 5A

22

Pronunciation change

Poor used to be pronounced like puer in Latin (and still is in some regions, e.g. Scotland).

Now it tends to be pronounced as a long vowel (like “door” and “more”)

Is there a difference between the pronunciation of “poor” and “paw” (zampa) ?

Page 23: 1 DIPHTHONGS English Phonetics and Phonology Lesson 5A

23

Finally:

Diphthongs are the element in a language which are most liable to change. The majority of the characteristics of a given accent are usually to be found in this area, so understanding of the underlying mechanics is vital if one wants to understand accents and accent change.


Recommended