Lecture 6 The consonant system of English


The Articulatory Classification of English Consonants


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Lecture 6The consonant system of English(1)

2. The Articulatory Classification of English Consonants

  • III. According to which passive organs of speech are involved in the articulation we distinguish:
  • 1) dental (pre-dental, inter-dental and post-dental);
  • 2) alveolar;
  • 3) palatal;
  • 4) velar (if the velum is passive).
  • It is more logical, however, to describe consonants from the point of view of the articulating organ for three reasons:
  • 1) because it is the articulating organ that performs some kind of work;
  • 2) Because the passive organ on the whole is determined by the active organ, since each articulating organ is usually brought into contact with a certain specific passive organ.

3. The Acoustic Classification of English Consonants

  • The acoustic character of a consonant is conditioned by its articulation.
  • Plosives and affricates (e.g. /t, d, t, ʤ/) differ from fricatives (e.g. /f, v/) mainly in that part of their spectra which corresponds to the articulatory “stop”. A plosive is characterized by the absence of noise in part of the spectrum. The plosion is marked by a burst of noise, i.e. the formant of noise appears.
  • Fricatives are characterized by the presence of a noise formant throughout the spectrum.
  • Hence plosives and affricates are classed as discontinuous and fricatives as continuant.

3.The Acoustic Classification of English Consonants

Labial Consonants

  • bilabial articulated with both lips – [w], [m], [p], [b]
  • labiodental articulated with the lower lip and upper teeth – [f], [v].
  • Lingual Consonants

    -Forelingual consonants:

  • interdental (predorsal dental) – [θ], [ð] (the tongue’s front surface forms a partial occlusion with the upper teeth);
  • apical alveolar – [t], [d], [n], [l], [s], [z], [∫], [ʒ], [t∫], [dʒ] (the front edge rises to the alveolar ridge);
  • cacuminal post-alveolar – [r] (the front edge is raised and a little bent to the alveolar back slope).
  • In mediolingual consonants an occlusion is formed by raising the middle part to the hard palate. Such is articulating the only English dorsal palatal [j] sound.

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