Transcript Slide 1

Nasal consonants /m/, /n/, /η/
• The basic characteristic of nasal consonants is
that the air escapes through the nose.
• The soft palate is lowered. The air cannot pass
through the mouth, it is prevented by complete
closure in the mouth at some point.
• The three types of closure are
• bilabial - m
• alveolar - n
• velar
- η
• m bilabial nasal consonant
• The soft palate is lowered. The lips are slightly
spread, pressed together forming a complete
obstruction to the air stream through the oral
cavity. The air passes through the nose. The
vocal cords vibrate.
• n alveolar nasal consonant
• The soft palate is lowered, the tip of the
tongue touches the alveolar ridge, forming a
complete obstruction to the flow of air
through the oral cavity. The air passes through
the nose. The vocal cords are vibrating.
Comparison
• Estonian n is a bit different. Slightly more of
the blade of the tongue is pressed against the
alveolar ridge
name - nimi
honey - hani
Avoid
gemination ( doubling in pronunciation)
palatalisation
E.g. penny
honey
η velar nasal consonant
A closure is formed in the mouth
between the back of the tongue and
the velum as for /k/ and /g/. The soft
palate is lowered. The vocal cords
vibrate.
There is a counterpart in Estonian. /η/ occurs
before a following g or k:
vang, rong, vanker, ronk
When we find the letters nk, k is
always pronounced
e.g. think, bank
/η/ is pronounced with the following
plosive g if the word cannot be divided
into two morphemes: verb + ending
and not pronounced if the word can
be divided into a verb + ending
e.g. finger - singer
anger - hanger
g is also pronounced after /η/ before suffixes
-er and -est of comparative and superlative
degrees of adjectives
longer – the longest
Lateral consonant /l/
/l/ alveolar lateral consonant
The soft palate is raised. The tip of the tongue
is in light contact with the alveolar ridge while
the sides of the tongue are lowered, forming
rather wide passages. The air escapes along
the sides of the tongue.
The so called ‘clear’ /l/ is used before vowels
and /j/
e.g. live, late, value
‘dark’ /l/ occurs before consonants and in
word-final position
e.g. help, almost, call
In case of the clear /l/ the front part of the
tongue is raised in the direction of the soft
palate, in case of the dark /l/ the back part of
the tongue is raised.
The devoiced /l/ followes stressed aspirated
/p/, /k/
e.g. play, clay
Comparison
In Estonian there is a non-palatalised lateral
consonant /l/
(lamba)tall
and a palatalised lateral consonant /l/
(hobuse)tall
It enables to distinguish words otherwise alike phonemic difference.
In English the difference between dark and clear
/l/ is not phonemic.
• In Estonian it is the tip of the tongue as well as
part of the front of the tongue that touches
the alveoli.
• In English there is less contact between the
tongue and the alveoli
• lipp - lip
• lukk - lukk
• lesk - less
The essential feature of the dark /l/ is the
accompanying dark resonance due to the /ɒ/
quality of the sound in the words where the
labial consonants precedes
E.g.
bubble, people, apple
Post alveolar approximant
consonant /r/
• Considerable differences can be found in the
pronunciation of /r/ in different accents of
English
• There is only one pronunciation that can be
recommended to the learners of RP: post
alveolar approximant
• The articulators approach each other but do
not get sufficiently close to each other to
produce a complete consonant
The tip of the tongue approaches the alveolar
area in approximately the way it would for a
/t/ or /d/ but never actually makes contact
with any part of the roof of the mouth at any
time.
The tongue is slightly curved backwards with
the tip raised
/r/ is not always pronounced in RP
It is pronounced if it is followed by a vowel
E.g.
red, arrive, hearing
It is not pronounced at the end of words and
when it is followed by a consonant
E.g.
car, ever, here, hard, verse
Many accents pronounce /r/ in final position
and before a consonant ( American, Scottish,
West of England)
• Accents which have /r/ in final positions and
before consonants are called rhotic
• Accents in which /r/ only occurs before vowels
are called non-rhotic
Linking and intrusive /r/
• When a word ending with the letter r is
immediately followed by a word beginning
with a vowel then /r/ is generally inserted in
the pronunciation - linking /r/
• Sometimes the linking usage is extended to all
/ə/, /ɑ:/, /ɔ:/ endings - intrusive /r/
E.g.
drama and music
law and order