phonology
Phonology is the study of the sound system of languages.
It is a huge area of language theory and it is difficult to do more on a
general language course than have an outline knowledge of what it includes. In
an exam, you may be asked to comment on a text that you are seeing for the
first time in terms of various language descriptions, of which phonology may be
one. At one extreme, phonology is concerned with anatomy and physiology
- the organs of speech and how we learn to use them. At another extreme,
phonology shades into socio-linguistics as we consider social attitudes
to features of sound such as accent and intonation. And part of
the subject is concerned with finding objective standard ways of recording
speech, and representing this symbolically.
For some kinds of study - perhaps a language
investigation into the phonological development of young children or regional
variations in accent, you will need to use phonetic transcription to be
credible. But this is not necessary in all kinds of study - in an exam, you may
be concerned with stylistic effects of sound in advertising or literature, such
as assonance, rhyme or onomatopoeia - and you do not need to use
special phonetic symbols to do this.
The physics and physiology of
speech
Man is distinguished from the other primates by having
the apparatus to make the sounds of speech. Of course most of us learn to speak
without ever knowing much about these organs, save in a vague and general sense
- so that we know how a cold or sore throat alters our own performance.
Language scientists have a very detailed understanding of how the human body
produces the sounds of speech. Leaving to one side the vast subject of how we
choose particular utterances and identify the sounds we need, we can think
rather simply of how we use our lungs to breathe out air, produce vibrations in
the larynx and then use our tongue, teeth and lips to modify the sounds. The
diagram below shows some of the more important speech organs.
This kind of diagram helps us to understand
what we observe in others but is less useful in understanding our own speech.
Scientists can now place small cameras into the mouths of experimental
subjects, and observe some of the physical movements that accompany speech.
But most of us move our vocal organs by reflexes or a sense of the sound we
want to produce, and are not likely to benefit from watching movement in the vocal
fold.
The diagram is a simplified cross-section
through the human head - which we could not see in reality in a living
speaker, though a simulation might be instructive. But we do observe some
external signs of speech sounds apart from what we hear.
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