Mi primera revista MIRELLA 9 | Page 4

CHAPTER-3

THE SOUNDS OF LANGUAGE
DESCRIPTION
Acoustic phonetics is the study of the physical properties of speech as sound Waves in the air and articulatory phonetics is the study of the physical production, Via the vocal organs, of speech sounds.( a) + V,( b)-V,( c) + V,( d)-V,( e) + V,( f)-V( g)-V( h) + V( i) + V( a) velar,( b) palatal,( c) labiodental,( d) velar,( e) glottal,( f) alveolar,( g) bilabial for example:( I) palatal,( j) alveolar,( k) dental( or interdental),( l) alveolar( C) stop,( d) fricative,( e) affricate,( f) liquid,( g) nasal,( h) Fricative,( i) glide( a) bike,( b) bought,( c) enjoy,( d) face,( e) howl,( f) hoping,( g) who,( h) cloak, Mine,( j) queue,( k) cheap,( l) the( a) kæʧ,( b) daʊt or dawt,( c) dʒɛm,( d) mɛʒər,( e) nɔɪz or nɔjz,( f) foʊn( G) ʃaɪ or ʃaj,( h) DIZ,( i) ɔt,( j) tʌf,( k) wʊd,( l) rɪŋ.
REFELCTIONS
This chapter taught me to the correct use of the subjects as for example the pronunciation and the leguage of the same to which each letter has a sound is not only because it is English and to speak it each word has its own sound and time to contain the air or that is There will be a little more mouth than in others although they are very similar words are not the same sound but of equal amenra are written. It is often said that languages differ by sound or melody. What does this mean only when one begins consciously the process of learning a foreign language, does one notice that the language in question possesses sounds far removed from those in one’ s own, and not even produced in the same manner. For example Sometimes, there are also sounds which sound similar, yet prove to be different by a minute, but essential, detail.