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• Used primarily for breathing and eating
                 secondarily for speaking constrcting
    THE          airflow in the mouth at various points, we
                 make the distinctive sounds for human
CONSONANT        speech. The vocal tract has active and
                 passive articulators. They are also know
 INVENTORY       as articulators and points articulation.




               • Four principal dimiensions are considered
                 when regarding “consonant articulation”
                 voicing articulator and point of the
ARTICULATORY     articulation cavity and manner.
    BASIS
VOICING                Voiced                voiceless
                       consonants

   • It directly          • A simple             • Voiceless
     deals with             explanation            consonants
     the sound              of voiced              do not used
     quality                consonants             the voice.
     produced by            is that they           They are
     the vocal              used the               percussive
     cords. When            voice. This is         and hard
     vocal cords            easy to test           sounds. You
     vibrated, it is        by putting             can test if a
     said to be             your finger            consonant is
     voiced;                on your                voiceless by
     otherwise, it          throat                 putting your
     is siad to be                                 finger on
     voiceless                                     your throat
ARTICULATOR AND POINT OF ARTICULATION




                    Point the                                Manner of
The articulator                          cavity
                   articulation                              articulation



Is the doer of    Is any part of                       It refers to the way
       the                             It concerns       how air flows out
                    the mouth                         during the production
  articulation                          the place
                    that can be                       of a sound. The sound
  and moves                             where air
                    reached by                        might be stop fricative
freely enough                        goes through.
                        the                            nasal lateral vibrant
to be active in                       It can be the
                   articulator. It                          affricateor a
the apeech. It                          mouth or          continuant. The
                  is also known
is also known                         nasal cavity.   manner of consonants
                     as Major
   as Major           passive                         describes the manner
     Active                                             in which airflow is
                    articulator                              restricted.
  Articulator
The active articulation touch the passive articulation and completely
cuts off the air through the mouth. English, Spanish and French include:
/p/,/b/,/t/,/d/,/k/,/g/.
                           ARTICULATION AND POINT OF ARTICULATION
              Bilabial                Apico-alveolar/dental*           Dorso -velar
  E         /p/          /b/    /t/                 /d/               /k/       /g/




                                                                                         ORAL

                                                                                                STOP
  S         /p/          /b/                /t/*               /d/*   /k/       /g/
  F         /p/          /b/                /t/*               /d/*   /k/       /g/
             vl          vd            vl                 vd          vl        vd
                                               VOICING
                                      HOMORGANIC SOUNDS

           In phonetic, this refers to sounds made at the same place of articulation

   is concerned with airflow i.e. the paths it takes and the degree to which it is impeded by
       vocal tract constrictions. In other words, manner of articulation describes how the
                                         sound is produced.
/p-b/ production
                       picture
                      spanish-english




       bilabial                            oral




    stop

/b/ voiced
                                        Voiceless /p/
/p/ PHONEMIC AND
PHONETICS DISTRIBUTION
CONTRASTIVE TRANSFER ANALYSIS
                   /P/




  The /p/ phonemic transfer is positive. This
 means that the /p/ sound is likely similar in
both languages. It is voiceless bilabial oral stop.
BILABIAL



                         /p/




     ENGLISH
                      SPANISH           FRENCH



Initial /p/ [ p]   Initial /p/ [ p]   Initial /p/ [p]
Middle [pʰ ]       Middle [ p]        Middle [p]
Final [ p-‟]       Final x            Final [p]
In Spanish, English and French /b/ sound is
/b/ PRODUCTION                            voiced, bilabial, oral and stop.




                                    /b/ PHONEMIC AND PHONETICS
                                           DISTRIBUTION




[-ß-] VOICED, BILABIAL, ORAL, FRICATIVE, WHICH OCCURS AFTER
   /L/ /ɾ/, BETWEEN VOWELS AS WELL ASA BETWEEN A VOWEL
   AND A VOICED CONSONANT SOUND. [-Ƀ IS ARBITRARY
                                          -]
   SYMBOL THAT CAN BE FOUND IN NON-OFFICIAL IPA
   NOTATION.
/t-d/ PRODUCTION PICTURE


   /t/                               /d/


                OralApico-alveolar
                    Occlusive

                                     Voiced
voiceless
Apico alveolar



                         /t/                                                   /d/


  ENGLISH              SPANISH           FRENCH             ENGLISH        SPANISH       FRENCH


                                                           Initial /d/     Initial /b/
                       Initial /t/ [t]   Initial /t/ [t]                                 Initial /d/[d]
                                                                           Middle [d]
                                                           Middle [d ]                   Middle [d]
Initial /t/ [tʰ] [t]   Middle [t]        Middle [t]                        v-M-v [d]
                                                                                         Final [ d]
Middle [ tn] [ɾ] [ʔ]   Final x           Final [t]         Final [ɾ] [ʔ]   Final [Ǿ]
Final [t-̍]
CONTRASTIVE TRANSFER
      ANALYSIS
     /t/ and /d/
/k-g/ PRODUCTION PICTURE


   /k/                                 /g/



               Oral dorso-velar stop


                                       Voiced
voiceless
CONTRASTIVE TRANSFER
      ANALYSIS
     /k/ and /g/
Dorso velar



                   /k/                                           /g/


ENGLISH         SPANISH       FRENCH           ENGLISH      SPANISH        FRENCH


                                                            Initial [g]
                              Initial [k]     Initial [g]   Middle [g]    Initial [g]
                Initial [k]   Middle [k]      Middle [g ]
Initial [kʰ]                                                [ɣ]           Middle [g ]
Middle [k]      Middle [k]    Final [kˈ]                    Final [Ǿ]
                                              Final [g]                   Final [g]
Final [k][kˈ]   Final x
CONTRAST OF ENGLISH, FRENCH
         AND SPANISH FRICATIVES

Contrastive Fricative Sounds Chart:

                     Articulator and Point of Articulation
        Labio          Apico          Apico       Fronto           glottal
        dental        alveolar     interdental    palatal
   E   /f/   /v/     /s/   /z/     /θ/    /ð/    /ʃ/ /ʒ/     /h/         -




                                                                                    fricative
   S   /f/       -   /s/   [-z-]   [-θ]   [-ð] /ʃ/     [ʒ]   [-h-] /x/




                                                                             oral
                                                  *

   F   /f/   /v/     /s/   /z/      -        -   /ʃ/ /ʒ/      -          -
        vl   vd      vl     vd     vl     vd     vl   vd      vl        vl
                                   Voicing
                      Homorganic Sounds
/f/ voiceless, labio-
  /f-v/ PRODUCTION                       dental,oral, fricative.
                                    /v/ voiced, labio-dental,oral,
                                                fricative.




                                          /v/ PHONEMIC AND PHONETIC
/f/ PHONEMIC AND PHONETIC                 FEATURES
FEATURES                                  The /v/ sound does not exist in
Both languages have the /f/ sound         Spanish. In English /v/ is voiced,
which is voiceless, labio-                labio-dental,oral, fricative.
dental,oral, fricative.                   It has one allophone:
Spanish has two allophones:               [v]
[f] [ɸ]
•The /ʃ/ sound occurs in kichwa words inserted in Ecuadorian
Spanish.
•Many English nouns ending in /f/ change into /v/ when the plural
ending is added.
•The /v/ sound doesn‟t exist in Spanish.
•The morphemes <-s> or <-es> is pronounced /-s/ when the
word ends in a voiceless consonant sound, it is pronounced /-z/
when the word ends in a voiced consonant sound.
•In the Ecuadorian coastal region, /s/ is articulated as [h] or even
dropped at the end of a syllable or the end of a word.
•This dialect variation is called “Aspirated-S”.
•The [θ] sound in Spanish happens as an allophone of /d/.
• The /ð/ matches the /θ/ in place and manner of articulation.
/s-z/ PRODUCTION PICTURE


   /s/                                 /z/


                Oral Apico-alveolar
                      fricative

                                      Voiced
voiceless
/ð/ PRODUCTION


/ð/ voiced, apico-interdental, oral, fricative.




 Since [ð] is a positional variant
   in Spanish for /d/ Spanish
  speakers tend to pronounce
 <th> as a dental stop sound,
                /d/.
                                                   EXAMPLES:
                                                     SPANISH
                                                  Verdad [beɾ̻’ðaθ]
                                                     ENGLISH
                                                    That /’ðæt/
/ʃ/ PHONEMIC AND
PHONETIC FEATURES




This /ʃ/ sound       Examples:
     occurs           English
 exclusively in      Propulsion
English has one     /pɹə‘pəlʃən/
 allophone [ʃ] .     Permission
                    /pəɹ'mɪʃən/
/ʒ /PRODUCTION




  /ʒ/ Sound occurs in English
 only middle and final position.


   The English /ʒ / sounds
 features are voiced, fronto-                     Examples
palatal, oral, groove, fricative,              Garage /gə'ɹaʒ/
 and has an allophone which                <si>ocacion /ə„keyʒən/
 keeps the same features as                 <s>measure /mɛʒəɹ/
         it s phoneme.                     <g> regime /ɹeyɪ'ʒiym/
                                              <z> azure /'æʒəɹ/


 /ʒ/In spanish does not occurs
          a phoneme.
/x /SPANISH
                                            PRODUCTION


               Oral
                                                                          Dorso velar



           Fricative
                                                                            Voiceless


                                                                     Examples
                                                                <j>jarabe /xa'ɾabe/
                                                                <g>girasol /xiɾa„sol/
/x /Is a sound which exists                                     <x>Xavier /xa'byeɾ/
particularly in Spanish.
This phoneme has three allophones
which may occur in free variation
regarding the position. This are                  A common confusion
[x]           voiceless,           dorso-         is made with the
velar,oral,fricative.                             glottal English /h/
[h] voiceless, glottal,oral,fricative.            when English speaker
[Ø] zero allophone
                                                  utter the velar sound
/h / PRODUCTION
                                ENGLISH-SPANISH


           Oral
                                                           Glottal



        Fricative
                                                          Voiceless


Spanish /h /has an allophone of [x] used by people
front the coastal region.
This phoneme in English has two allophones. This         Examples
are                                                      <h>holiday
[h] voiceless, glottal, oral, fricative.                 /„halɪdey/
[-ɦ-] voiceless, glottal, oral, fricative, and happens   <wh>whole
just between voiced sounds.                              /„howl/
The /h/ sounds never occurs in final position nor
has a counterpart.
CONTRAST OF ENGLISH AND SPANISH AFFRICATES



                     Those consonants have the
                      same or similar places of
                            articulation.




ENGLISH AFFRICATES     SPANISH AFFRICATES         SPANISH SIMBOLS
/tʃ/ [tʃ]                  /tʃ/ [tʃ]                   /č/
[dʒ]                                                   /ǰ/
/tʃ/ /dʒ/ PRODUCTION
                             ENGLISH-SPANISH

Apico alveolar lamino
    fronto palatal                                            oral


                                                         Voiceless /tʃ/
      Africative


                                                         Voiced /dʒ/
/tʃ/ there are in
Spanish and English. It         Examples English
is voiceless, apico            <cheap> /tʃɪyp/
alveolar, lamino ,           <preacher> /pɹɪytʃəɹ/
fronto , palatal, oral       <reach>       / ɹɪytʃ/
                                                      Examples Spanish
affricate. Its phoneme                                <chino> /tʃino/
[tʃ]                                                  <pecho> / petʃo/
/dʒ/ PRODUCTION
                           ENGLISH-SPANISH


Spanish spellings: /ʤ/ does not
exist as a phoneme


         In english its occurs as phoneme and
         allophone /ʤ/voiced, apico alveolar,         Examples of English
         lamino, fronto palatal, oral affricate       <jam> /ʤæm/
                                                      <larger> /laɹʤəɹ/
                                                      <large> /laɹʤ/
               In spanish it’s an of the palatal
               aproximant /y/ uttered by people
               with a high register mainly fron the    Examples of spanish
               city of guayaquil                       <llave> /ʤabe/
                                                       <llora> /ʤora/
When we pronounce this consonants, the air
    to flow out through the nasal cavity.

    Contrastive nasal sound chart


         Articulator and point articulation
         bilabial     Apico         Dorso        Dorso
                      alveolar      velar        palatal
E        /m/          /n/           /ŋ/          -
S        /m/          /n/           /ŋ/          /ɲ/
         vd           vd            vd           vd
         ALL OF THEM ARE VOICED, OCCLUSIVE,
         CONTINUANT
/m/ PRODUCTION
                                 ENGLISH-SPANISH

                       The /m/sounds is similar in
                       both languages:[m] voiced,
                       bilabial, nasal, occlusive, continuant.




   English                                                Spanish
The /m/ phoneme has three
allophones:                                      The /m/ phoneme has one
 [m] voiced, bilabial, nasal, occlusive,         allophone:
continuant
[-ɱ-] voiced, labiodental, nasal,
                                                  [m] voiced, bilabial, nasal,
occlusive, continuant which occurs               occlusive, continuant
before the voiceless labiodental
fricative.
 [m̩ ] voiced, bilabial, nasal, occlusive,
continuant, occurs in a word finally
syllable
English and Spanish /n/
             /n/ PRODUCTION                                  *sound is voiced *apico-alveolar
                                                              *nasal             *occlusive
             ENGLISH-SPANISH                                               *continuant




               Spanish
[n] voiced ,apico-alveolar, nasal,           English
oclusive, continuant                 [n] voiced, apico-
[-n-] voiced, apico-dental, nasal,   alveolar, nasal
ocllusive continuant                 occusive continuant
[nj] voiced,fronto-palatal, nasal     [-ņ] voiced, apico
occlusive ,continuant                alveolar, nasal,
[ŋ] voiced, dorso velar, nasal       occlusive continuant,               English nasal consonants
                                     syllabic and occurs                 may become syllabic when
occlusive,continuant
                                                                            occur in final-word.
[-ɱ-] vioced, labiodental, nasal,
occlusive, continuant
/l/ Voiced, apico-alveolar, oral, lateral.


                                                   Articulator and point of
                                                        Articulation
                                                 apico          fronto palatal
                                                 alveolar
                                                                                 O   L
                                             E   /l/            -                R
                                                                                     A
                                                                                     T

                                             S   /l/            / ʎ/             A   E
                                                                                     R
                                                                                 L   A
                                             F   /l/            -                    L

                                                       Vd              Vd
                                                            Voicing
/l/ Allophones



                  ENGLISH                                           SPANISH
[l]         [Į]         [-ł]      [-,ł]                     [l]       [ḷ]      [ḽ]




                        /ʎ/ Voiced, fronto-palatal, oral, lateral



                                          SPANISH


      [ʎ]                       [y]                   [j]                     [dȝ]
Articulator and Point of Articulation
    apico post alveolar     apico alveolar             Apico alveolar   Dorso uvulaire

E           /ɹ/                                [ɾ]                                       O
                                                                                         R
S                                 /ɾ/                        /ɼ/
                                                                                         A
F                                 [ɾ]                                       [r]          L
        retroflex                 flap                       trill         fricative
             Vd.                    Vd.                      Vd.               Vd.
                                             Voicing
ENGLISH
                                                            /ɹ /
PHONETIC DISTRIBUTION OF /r/.


                                  [ɹ]                [ ɹ]          [ɚ]     [ɝ]


                                                       FRENCH


                                                            /ʁ/
                                        [ʁ]                 [ɾ]           [R]


                                                            SPANISH
                                        /r/                                     /ɾ/
                                [r]           [ɾ ]                  [ɾ]         [ ɾ̪ ]
                                [ɾ]
[-u]̭            E                        /w/ sound
          [w-]
    [g]              S                   Voiced ,bilabial, dorso-
                                                  velar,
                 F                      palatal,approximant,oral




                         The w sound is created with the jaw
                         mostly closed and the lips formed in a
                         small, tight circle. The sound is voiced,
                         so the vocal cords must vibrate during
                         the production of the sound.
/y/ sound
                         Voiced, fronto-palatal,
                        approximant,oral,fricative




The y sound is created with                                  [y-]
the tongue even closer to                         E
                                                      [ʤ-]             [i̭ -]
the back of the tooth ridge
and the hard palate.                          S              [j-]
                                          F           /j/           semiconson
                                                                       ant
SPANISH

            WORDS         PHONEMIC      PHONETIC
                          TRANSCRIPT    TRANSCRIPT
                          ION           ION
 INITIAL   huir             /wiɾ/         [uɪ̭ɾ]
 MIDDLE    guante         /’gwante/     [΄gua̭ṋte]
 FINAL            x             x           x




                      ENGLISH
             WORDS        PHONEMIC       PHONETIC
                          TRANSCRIPTI    TRANSCRIPTI
                          ON             ON
INITIAL    wanted           /wantɪd/       [waṋtɪd]
MIDDLE     twenty           /’twentɪ/      [΄twɛṋtɪ]
FINAL      screw            / ΄skɹuw/      [΄skɹuṷ]
SPANISH
               WORDS          PHONEMIC          PHONETIC
                              TRANSCRIPT       TRANSCRIPT
                                 ION              ION
 INITIAL     yema              /yema/           [‘yɛ:ma]
 MIDDLE      playa             /’pl̩aya/        [΄’pl̩aya]
 FINAL       voy                /boy/             [boi̭]



                    ENGLISH
            WORDS       PHONEMIC      PHONETIC
                        TRANSCRIP     TRANSCRIP
                          TION          TION
INITIAL    yellow        /yɛlɔw/           [yɛlɔṷ]
MIDDLE     twenty       /’twentɪ/       [΄twɛṋtɪ]
FINAL      screw        / ΄skɹuw/       [΄skɹuṷ]

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English Consonants by Belkis Villalba

  • 1.
  • 2. • Used primarily for breathing and eating secondarily for speaking constrcting THE airflow in the mouth at various points, we make the distinctive sounds for human CONSONANT speech. The vocal tract has active and passive articulators. They are also know INVENTORY as articulators and points articulation. • Four principal dimiensions are considered when regarding “consonant articulation” voicing articulator and point of the ARTICULATORY articulation cavity and manner. BASIS
  • 3. VOICING Voiced voiceless consonants • It directly • A simple • Voiceless deals with explanation consonants the sound of voiced do not used quality consonants the voice. produced by is that they They are the vocal used the percussive cords. When voice. This is and hard vocal cords easy to test sounds. You vibrated, it is by putting can test if a said to be your finger consonant is voiced; on your voiceless by otherwise, it throat putting your is siad to be finger on voiceless your throat
  • 4. ARTICULATOR AND POINT OF ARTICULATION Point the Manner of The articulator cavity articulation articulation Is the doer of Is any part of It refers to the way the It concerns how air flows out the mouth during the production articulation the place that can be of a sound. The sound and moves where air reached by might be stop fricative freely enough goes through. the nasal lateral vibrant to be active in It can be the articulator. It affricateor a the apeech. It mouth or continuant. The is also known is also known nasal cavity. manner of consonants as Major as Major passive describes the manner Active in which airflow is articulator restricted. Articulator
  • 5. The active articulation touch the passive articulation and completely cuts off the air through the mouth. English, Spanish and French include: /p/,/b/,/t/,/d/,/k/,/g/. ARTICULATION AND POINT OF ARTICULATION Bilabial Apico-alveolar/dental* Dorso -velar E /p/ /b/ /t/ /d/ /k/ /g/ ORAL STOP S /p/ /b/ /t/* /d/* /k/ /g/ F /p/ /b/ /t/* /d/* /k/ /g/ vl vd vl vd vl vd VOICING HOMORGANIC SOUNDS In phonetic, this refers to sounds made at the same place of articulation is concerned with airflow i.e. the paths it takes and the degree to which it is impeded by vocal tract constrictions. In other words, manner of articulation describes how the sound is produced.
  • 6. /p-b/ production picture spanish-english bilabial oral stop /b/ voiced Voiceless /p/
  • 8. CONTRASTIVE TRANSFER ANALYSIS /P/ The /p/ phonemic transfer is positive. This means that the /p/ sound is likely similar in both languages. It is voiceless bilabial oral stop.
  • 9. BILABIAL /p/ ENGLISH SPANISH FRENCH Initial /p/ [ p] Initial /p/ [ p] Initial /p/ [p] Middle [pʰ ] Middle [ p] Middle [p] Final [ p-‟] Final x Final [p]
  • 10. In Spanish, English and French /b/ sound is /b/ PRODUCTION voiced, bilabial, oral and stop. /b/ PHONEMIC AND PHONETICS DISTRIBUTION [-ß-] VOICED, BILABIAL, ORAL, FRICATIVE, WHICH OCCURS AFTER /L/ /ɾ/, BETWEEN VOWELS AS WELL ASA BETWEEN A VOWEL AND A VOICED CONSONANT SOUND. [-Ƀ IS ARBITRARY -] SYMBOL THAT CAN BE FOUND IN NON-OFFICIAL IPA NOTATION.
  • 11. /t-d/ PRODUCTION PICTURE /t/ /d/ OralApico-alveolar Occlusive Voiced voiceless
  • 12. Apico alveolar /t/ /d/ ENGLISH SPANISH FRENCH ENGLISH SPANISH FRENCH Initial /d/ Initial /b/ Initial /t/ [t] Initial /t/ [t] Initial /d/[d] Middle [d] Middle [d ] Middle [d] Initial /t/ [tʰ] [t] Middle [t] Middle [t] v-M-v [d] Final [ d] Middle [ tn] [ɾ] [ʔ] Final x Final [t] Final [ɾ] [ʔ] Final [Ǿ] Final [t-̍]
  • 13. CONTRASTIVE TRANSFER ANALYSIS /t/ and /d/
  • 14. /k-g/ PRODUCTION PICTURE /k/ /g/ Oral dorso-velar stop Voiced voiceless
  • 15. CONTRASTIVE TRANSFER ANALYSIS /k/ and /g/
  • 16. Dorso velar /k/ /g/ ENGLISH SPANISH FRENCH ENGLISH SPANISH FRENCH Initial [g] Initial [k] Initial [g] Middle [g] Initial [g] Initial [k] Middle [k] Middle [g ] Initial [kʰ] [ɣ] Middle [g ] Middle [k] Middle [k] Final [kˈ] Final [Ǿ] Final [g] Final [g] Final [k][kˈ] Final x
  • 17. CONTRAST OF ENGLISH, FRENCH AND SPANISH FRICATIVES Contrastive Fricative Sounds Chart: Articulator and Point of Articulation Labio Apico Apico Fronto glottal dental alveolar interdental palatal E /f/ /v/ /s/ /z/ /θ/ /ð/ /ʃ/ /ʒ/ /h/ - fricative S /f/ - /s/ [-z-] [-θ] [-ð] /ʃ/ [ʒ] [-h-] /x/ oral * F /f/ /v/ /s/ /z/ - - /ʃ/ /ʒ/ - - vl vd vl vd vl vd vl vd vl vl Voicing Homorganic Sounds
  • 18. /f/ voiceless, labio- /f-v/ PRODUCTION dental,oral, fricative. /v/ voiced, labio-dental,oral, fricative. /v/ PHONEMIC AND PHONETIC /f/ PHONEMIC AND PHONETIC FEATURES FEATURES The /v/ sound does not exist in Both languages have the /f/ sound Spanish. In English /v/ is voiced, which is voiceless, labio- labio-dental,oral, fricative. dental,oral, fricative. It has one allophone: Spanish has two allophones: [v] [f] [ɸ]
  • 19. •The /ʃ/ sound occurs in kichwa words inserted in Ecuadorian Spanish. •Many English nouns ending in /f/ change into /v/ when the plural ending is added. •The /v/ sound doesn‟t exist in Spanish. •The morphemes <-s> or <-es> is pronounced /-s/ when the word ends in a voiceless consonant sound, it is pronounced /-z/ when the word ends in a voiced consonant sound. •In the Ecuadorian coastal region, /s/ is articulated as [h] or even dropped at the end of a syllable or the end of a word. •This dialect variation is called “Aspirated-S”. •The [θ] sound in Spanish happens as an allophone of /d/. • The /ð/ matches the /θ/ in place and manner of articulation.
  • 20. /s-z/ PRODUCTION PICTURE /s/ /z/ Oral Apico-alveolar fricative Voiced voiceless
  • 21. /ð/ PRODUCTION /ð/ voiced, apico-interdental, oral, fricative. Since [ð] is a positional variant in Spanish for /d/ Spanish speakers tend to pronounce <th> as a dental stop sound, /d/. EXAMPLES: SPANISH Verdad [beɾ̻’ðaθ] ENGLISH That /’ðæt/
  • 22. /ʃ/ PHONEMIC AND PHONETIC FEATURES This /ʃ/ sound Examples: occurs English exclusively in Propulsion English has one /pɹə‘pəlʃən/ allophone [ʃ] . Permission /pəɹ'mɪʃən/
  • 23. /ʒ /PRODUCTION /ʒ/ Sound occurs in English only middle and final position. The English /ʒ / sounds features are voiced, fronto- Examples palatal, oral, groove, fricative, Garage /gə'ɹaʒ/ and has an allophone which <si>ocacion /ə„keyʒən/ keeps the same features as <s>measure /mɛʒəɹ/ it s phoneme. <g> regime /ɹeyɪ'ʒiym/ <z> azure /'æʒəɹ/ /ʒ/In spanish does not occurs a phoneme.
  • 24. /x /SPANISH PRODUCTION Oral Dorso velar Fricative Voiceless Examples <j>jarabe /xa'ɾabe/ <g>girasol /xiɾa„sol/ /x /Is a sound which exists <x>Xavier /xa'byeɾ/ particularly in Spanish. This phoneme has three allophones which may occur in free variation regarding the position. This are A common confusion [x] voiceless, dorso- is made with the velar,oral,fricative. glottal English /h/ [h] voiceless, glottal,oral,fricative. when English speaker [Ø] zero allophone utter the velar sound
  • 25. /h / PRODUCTION ENGLISH-SPANISH Oral Glottal Fricative Voiceless Spanish /h /has an allophone of [x] used by people front the coastal region. This phoneme in English has two allophones. This Examples are <h>holiday [h] voiceless, glottal, oral, fricative. /„halɪdey/ [-ɦ-] voiceless, glottal, oral, fricative, and happens <wh>whole just between voiced sounds. /„howl/ The /h/ sounds never occurs in final position nor has a counterpart.
  • 26. CONTRAST OF ENGLISH AND SPANISH AFFRICATES Those consonants have the same or similar places of articulation. ENGLISH AFFRICATES SPANISH AFFRICATES SPANISH SIMBOLS /tʃ/ [tʃ] /tʃ/ [tʃ] /č/ [dʒ] /ǰ/
  • 27. /tʃ/ /dʒ/ PRODUCTION ENGLISH-SPANISH Apico alveolar lamino fronto palatal oral Voiceless /tʃ/ Africative Voiced /dʒ/ /tʃ/ there are in Spanish and English. It Examples English is voiceless, apico <cheap> /tʃɪyp/ alveolar, lamino , <preacher> /pɹɪytʃəɹ/ fronto , palatal, oral <reach> / ɹɪytʃ/ Examples Spanish affricate. Its phoneme <chino> /tʃino/ [tʃ] <pecho> / petʃo/
  • 28. /dʒ/ PRODUCTION ENGLISH-SPANISH Spanish spellings: /ʤ/ does not exist as a phoneme In english its occurs as phoneme and allophone /ʤ/voiced, apico alveolar, Examples of English lamino, fronto palatal, oral affricate <jam> /ʤæm/ <larger> /laɹʤəɹ/ <large> /laɹʤ/ In spanish it’s an of the palatal aproximant /y/ uttered by people with a high register mainly fron the Examples of spanish city of guayaquil <llave> /ʤabe/ <llora> /ʤora/
  • 29. When we pronounce this consonants, the air to flow out through the nasal cavity. Contrastive nasal sound chart Articulator and point articulation bilabial Apico Dorso Dorso alveolar velar palatal E /m/ /n/ /ŋ/ - S /m/ /n/ /ŋ/ /ɲ/ vd vd vd vd ALL OF THEM ARE VOICED, OCCLUSIVE, CONTINUANT
  • 30. /m/ PRODUCTION ENGLISH-SPANISH The /m/sounds is similar in both languages:[m] voiced, bilabial, nasal, occlusive, continuant. English Spanish The /m/ phoneme has three allophones: The /m/ phoneme has one [m] voiced, bilabial, nasal, occlusive, allophone: continuant [-ɱ-] voiced, labiodental, nasal, [m] voiced, bilabial, nasal, occlusive, continuant which occurs occlusive, continuant before the voiceless labiodental fricative. [m̩ ] voiced, bilabial, nasal, occlusive, continuant, occurs in a word finally syllable
  • 31. English and Spanish /n/ /n/ PRODUCTION *sound is voiced *apico-alveolar *nasal *occlusive ENGLISH-SPANISH *continuant Spanish [n] voiced ,apico-alveolar, nasal, English oclusive, continuant [n] voiced, apico- [-n-] voiced, apico-dental, nasal, alveolar, nasal ocllusive continuant occusive continuant [nj] voiced,fronto-palatal, nasal [-ņ] voiced, apico occlusive ,continuant alveolar, nasal, [ŋ] voiced, dorso velar, nasal occlusive continuant, English nasal consonants syllabic and occurs may become syllabic when occlusive,continuant occur in final-word. [-ɱ-] vioced, labiodental, nasal, occlusive, continuant
  • 32. /l/ Voiced, apico-alveolar, oral, lateral. Articulator and point of Articulation apico fronto palatal alveolar O L E /l/ - R A T S /l/ / ʎ/ A E R L A F /l/ - L Vd Vd Voicing
  • 33. /l/ Allophones ENGLISH SPANISH [l] [Į] [-ł] [-,ł] [l] [ḷ] [ḽ] /ʎ/ Voiced, fronto-palatal, oral, lateral SPANISH [ʎ] [y] [j] [dȝ]
  • 34. Articulator and Point of Articulation apico post alveolar apico alveolar Apico alveolar Dorso uvulaire E /ɹ/ [ɾ] O R S /ɾ/ /ɼ/ A F [ɾ] [r] L retroflex flap trill fricative Vd. Vd. Vd. Vd. Voicing
  • 35. ENGLISH /ɹ / PHONETIC DISTRIBUTION OF /r/. [ɹ] [ ɹ] [ɚ] [ɝ] FRENCH /ʁ/ [ʁ] [ɾ] [R] SPANISH /r/ /ɾ/ [r] [ɾ ] [ɾ] [ ɾ̪ ] [ɾ]
  • 36. [-u]̭ E /w/ sound [w-] [g] S Voiced ,bilabial, dorso- velar, F palatal,approximant,oral The w sound is created with the jaw mostly closed and the lips formed in a small, tight circle. The sound is voiced, so the vocal cords must vibrate during the production of the sound.
  • 37. /y/ sound Voiced, fronto-palatal, approximant,oral,fricative The y sound is created with [y-] the tongue even closer to E [ʤ-] [i̭ -] the back of the tooth ridge and the hard palate. S [j-] F /j/ semiconson ant
  • 38. SPANISH WORDS PHONEMIC PHONETIC TRANSCRIPT TRANSCRIPT ION ION INITIAL huir /wiɾ/ [uɪ̭ɾ] MIDDLE guante /’gwante/ [΄gua̭ṋte] FINAL x x x ENGLISH WORDS PHONEMIC PHONETIC TRANSCRIPTI TRANSCRIPTI ON ON INITIAL wanted /wantɪd/ [waṋtɪd] MIDDLE twenty /’twentɪ/ [΄twɛṋtɪ] FINAL screw / ΄skɹuw/ [΄skɹuṷ]
  • 39. SPANISH WORDS PHONEMIC PHONETIC TRANSCRIPT TRANSCRIPT ION ION INITIAL yema /yema/ [‘yɛ:ma] MIDDLE playa /’pl̩aya/ [΄’pl̩aya] FINAL voy /boy/ [boi̭] ENGLISH WORDS PHONEMIC PHONETIC TRANSCRIP TRANSCRIP TION TION INITIAL yellow /yɛlɔw/ [yɛlɔṷ] MIDDLE twenty /’twentɪ/ [΄twɛṋtɪ] FINAL screw / ΄skɹuw/ [΄skɹuṷ]