This textbook is a revision and expansion of A Manual for Articulatory Phonetics, compiled by Rick Floyd in 1981 and revised in 1986. It includes many other people's materials from articulatory phonetics courses as taught for over sixty years in the training schools of SIL International. It also includes much information from sources outside of SIL.
It is written in an informal, personal style and is a practical book for teachers and students alike. Most chapters begin with a statement of goals and conclude with a list of key concepts and exercises. Examples, tables, and explanatory figures are distributed liberally throughout.
This book is oriented primarily towards native speakers of American English, particularly with reference to examples used to guide pronunciation of new sounds. However, most of the information included should be profitable to students regardless of their native language.
The International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) is used for the phonetic transcription, but the equivalent Americanist symbols are also given in order to equip the student to use other linguists' materials, regardless of which system they use to transcribe their data.
View sample pages from Articulatory Phonetics: Tools for Analyzing the World's Languages, Fourth Edition
About the authors
Anita Bickford (M.A., University of North Dakota) specializes in second language acquisition and articulatory phonetics and regularly teaches courses in both at the Summer Institute of Linguistics, University of North Dakota.
Rick Floyd (Ph.D., University of California in San Diego), has studied Wanka Quechua in the central Peruvian Andes since 1981. He has taught phonetics and other courses at several SIL schools and is a linguistic consultant of SIL Peru. He is the author of The Structure of Evidential Categories in Wanka Quechua and numerous articles.
Table of Contents
Preface
- Sound Identification
- Face Diagrams
- Fricatives
- Stops
- Vowels
- Nasals
- More Vowels
- Tracking
- Sibilants
- Uses of Pitch Variation
- Stress
- Nasalized Vowels
- Laterals
- Length
- Voiceless Vowels
- Affricates
- Glottal Consonants
- Central Approximants
- Review Exercises and Tables (I)
- Palatal and Uvular Consonants
- Syllabic Consonants and Prenasalization
- Transition and Release of Consonants
- Speech Styles
- Fronting and Retroflexion
- Ejectives
- Flaps and Trills
- States of the Glottis
- Implosives
- Breathy Stops and Affricates
- Pharyngeal and Epiglottal Consonants
- Secondary Articulations
- Consonant Clusters, Vowel Clusters, and Vowel Glides
- Double Articulations
- Tongue Root Placement and Vowels
- Fortis and Lenis Consonants; Controlled and Ballistic Syllables
- Clicks
- Palatography
- Miscellaneous Final Details
- Review Exercises and Tables (II)
References
Index of Languages
Subject Index