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  1. Vowels are made without an obstruction in the vocal tract, so they are quite sonorous. The body of the tongue moves in the mouth to shape each vowel, and for some vowels, the lips are rounded as well. Linguists classify vowels according to four pieces of information: tongue height, tongue backness, lip rounding, and tenseness.

  2. 1. Chapter 1 – Vowel Sounds. INTRODUCTION. Five or six letters in the alphabet are used to represent vowels in writing: a, e, i, o ,u and sometimes y. In this book, however, we will focus on pronunciation rather than the letters in the alphabet. There is a system for representing the pronunciation of vowels in writing.

    • Vowel Quality
    • Nasality
    • Length
    • Multiple Vowel Qualities in Sequence
    • Putting It All Together!

    Vowel phones can be categorized by the configuration of the tongue and lips during their articulation, which determines the vowel’s overall vowel quality. Vowel quality is often much more of a continuum than consonant categories like place and manner. A slight change in articulation makes little difference in what a vowel sounds like, but it can ha...

    In Section 3.4, we talked about how the velum can move to make a distinction between oral and nasal stops based on whether or not air can flow into the nasal cavity. The same distinction can be found for vowels. If a vowel is articulated with a raised velum to block airflow into the nasal cavity, the vowel is called oral. If instead the velum is lo...

    In addition to differences in vowel quality and nasality, vowels may also differ from each other in length, which is a way of categorizing them based on their duration. In most spoken languages where vowel length matters, there is just a two-way distinction between long vowels and short vowels, with long vowels having a longer duration than their s...

    Many vowels of the world’s spoken languages have a relatively stable pronunciation from beginning to end. These kinds of stable vowel phones are called monophthongs. However, just as there are dynamic consonant phones (affricates), vowel phones may also change their articulation from beginning to end. Most of these are diphthongs, which begin with ...

    There is not as much consistency in the order of descriptions for vowels as for consonants. Perhaps the most common order is height – backness – rounding, but rounding is sometimes given first instead, and though height is usually given immediately before backness, these can also be switched. Thus, the vowel in the English word betmight be describe...

  3. e, ɛ/, while /i-e, i-ɛ, ɪ-e, ɪ-ɛ/ comparisons were used to control for the tense/lax distinction in general, as well as potential effects of height. Fillers were created using the same vowels and codas /b, g, p, k/. CalE speakers comprised a control group that did not engage in /æ/ tensing, while NCS speakers formed the test group that did.

  4. Values of phonetic symbols are defined in terms of a variety of primarily articulatorily defined phonetic dimensions as in (2). A diphthong is a sequence of vowel-like elements – vowels and glides – in one syllable. The three most important properties for defining vowels are height, backness, and roundness.

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  6. Tense vowels are longer than lax vowels of the same general height class. /i/ longer than /I/ /u/ longer than /U/ /ej/ longer than /E/. The tense back vowels /ow/ and /Å/ (both /A/ and /ç/ in GA) are longer than the lax central / /. An exception to the ‘lax vowels shorter than tense’ is /Q/. It is often as long as any other vowel.

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