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单词 phonetics
释义

phonetics


pho·net·ics

P0254000 (fə-nĕt′ĭks)n. (used with a sing. verb)1. The branch of linguistics that deals with the sounds of speech and their production, combination, description, and representation by written symbols.2. The system of sounds of a particular language.

phonetics

(fəˈnɛtɪks) n (Phonetics & Phonology) (functioning as singular) the science concerned with the study of speech processes, including the production, perception, and analysis of speech sounds from both an acoustic and a physiological point of view. This science, though capable of being applied to language studies, technically excludes linguistic considerations. Compare phonology

pho•net•ics

(fəˈnɛt ɪks, foʊ-)

n. 1. (used with a sing. v.) the study of speech sounds and their production, transmission, reception, analysis, classification, and transcription. 2. (used with a sing. or pl. v.) the phonetic system or the body of phonetic facts of a particular language.

phonetics

1. the science or study of speech sounds and their production, transmission, and perception, and their analysis, classification, and transcription.
2. the science or study of speech sounds with respect to their role in distinguishing meanings among words.
3. the phonetic system of a particular language. Cf. phonology. — phonetician, n. — phonetic, phonetical, adj.
See also: Linguistics

phonetics

The sounds used in speech, or the scientific study of these.
Thesaurus
Noun1.phonetics - the branch of acoustics concerned with speech processes including its production and perception and acoustic analysisphonetics - the branch of acoustics concerned with speech processes including its production and perception and acoustic analysisacoustics - the study of the physical properties of soundspeech sound, phone, sound - (phonetics) an individual sound unit of speech without concern as to whether or not it is a phoneme of some languageinfection - (phonetics) the alteration of a speech sound under the influence of a neighboring soundassimilate - become similar in sound; "The nasal assimilates to the following consonant"dissimilate - become dissimilar by changing the sound qualities; "These consonants dissimilate"shift - change phonetically as part of a systematic historical change; "Grimm showed how the consonants shifted"long - (of speech sounds or syllables) of relatively long duration; "the English vowel sounds in `bate', `beat', `bite', `boat', `boot' are long"short - of speech sounds or syllables of relatively short duration; "the English vowel sounds in `pat', `pet', `pit', `pot', putt' are short"tense - pronounced with relatively tense tongue muscles (e.g., the vowel sound in `beat')lax - pronounced with muscles of the tongue and jaw relatively relaxed (e.g., the vowel sound in `bet')
Translations
语音学音标

phonetic

(fəˈnetik) adjective relating to the sounds of (a) language. He's making a phonetic study of the speech of the deaf. 語音的,語音學的 语音的,语音学的 phoˈnetics noun singular the study of the sounds of language. 語音學 语音学 noun singular, noun plural (a system of) symbols used to show the pronunciation of words. 音標 音标

phonetics


phonetics

(fōnĕt`ĭks, fə–), study of the sounds of languages from three basic points of view. Phonetics studies speech sounds according to their production in the vocal organs (articulatory phonetics), their physical properties (acoustic phonetics), or their effect on the ear (auditory phonetics). All phonetics are interrelated, since human articulatory and auditory mechanisms correspond to each other and are mediated by wavelength, pitch, and the other physical properties of sound. Systems of phonetic writing are aimed at the accurate transcription of any sequence of speech sounds; the best known is the International Phonetic Alphabet. Narrow transcription specifies as many features of a sound as can be symbolized, while broad transcription specifies only as many features of a sound as are necessary to distinguish it from other sounds. Each language uses a limited number of the humanly possible sounds grouped into phonemes, and the hearer-speaker is trained from childhood to classify them into these groups, rejecting as nonsignificant all sorts of features actually phonetically present. So the English speaker does not notice that he always makes a puff of air when he pronounces the p of pin and never makes the puff with the p of spin; for him they are the same sound. Yet in some languages (as in Sanskrit) just the presence or absence of that puff in both words would indicate a phonemic difference, and two words might differ in meaning because of the puff. In English the two sounds are considered variations of a single sound, the phoneme p, and as such are allophones. In the other situation, aspirated p (p with a puff) and unaspirated p are not allophones but separate phonemes. Phonemes include all significant differences of sound, including features of voicing, place and manner of articulation, accentaccent,
in speech, emphasis given a particular sound, called prosodic systems in linguistics. There are three basic accentual methods: stress, tone, and length. In English each word has at least one primary stressed syllable, as in weath`er;
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, and secondary features of nasalization, glottalization, labialization, and the like. Whereas phonetics refers to the study of the production, perception, and physical nature of speech sounds, phonologyphonology,
study of the sound systems of languages. It is distinguished from phonetics, which is the study of the production, perception, and physical properties of speech sounds; phonology attempts to account for how they are combined, organized, and convey meaning in
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 refers to the study of how such sounds are combined in particular languages and of how they are used to convey meaning. Systematic sound change through time is treated by comparative and historical linguisticslinguistics,
scientific study of language, covering the structure (morphology and syntax; see grammar), sounds (phonology), and meaning (semantics), as well as the history of the relations of languages to each other and the cultural place of language in human behavior.
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. See grammargrammar,
description of the structure of a language, consisting of the sounds (see phonology); the meaningful combinations of these sounds into words or parts of words, called morphemes; and the arrangement of the morphemes into phrases and sentences, called syntax.
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; languagelanguage,
systematic communication by vocal symbols. It is a universal characteristic of the human species. Nothing is known of its origin, although scientists have identified a gene that clearly contributes to the human ability to use language.
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; writingwriting,
the visible recording of language peculiar to the human species. Writing enables the transmission of ideas over vast distances of time and space and is a prerequisite of complex civilization.
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.

Bibliography

See K. Pike, Phonemics (1947); N. Chomsky and M. Halle, The Sound Pattern of English (1968); P. Ladefoged, A Course in Linguistic Phonetics (1982); G. Pullum and W. Ladusaw, Phonetic Symbol Guide (1986); I. R. MacKay, Phonetics (2d ed. 1987).

Phonetics

 

the branch of linguistics that studies the sounds of language. In contrast to the other linguistic disciplines, phonetics studies both the linguistic function of sounds and sounds themselves: their acoustic properties as well as the functioning of the speech organs. For this reason, phonetics has a relationship with nonlinguistic disciplines: with the anatomy and physiology of speech production and speech perception, on the one hand, and with the acoustics of speech, on the other. Phonetics, like linguistics in general, is associated with psychology, since speech is part of man’s psychic activity.

Unlike the nonlinguistic disciplines, phonetics regards sounds as elements in a linguistic system that give words and sentences a concrete acoustic form without which communication would be impossible. The acoustic aspect of language cannot be understood outside this function. Even an individual speech sound may be isolated from the sound chain only as a phoneme, that is, only in relation to the sound’s associations with the semantic units of language.

Phonetics may be studied in terms of its acoustic and articulatory aspects or in terms of its functional and linguistic aspects. Consequently, phonetics is divided into phonetics proper and phonology.

General phonetics is distinguished from applied phonetics, or the phonetics of individual languages. General phonetics studies the preconditions for speech production in terms of the capacities of the vocal apparatus. For example, the speech organs determine whether a consonant will be a labial, front, or back consonant, and the way in which the air stream from the lungs is obstructed determines whether a consonant will be an obstruent or a fricative. General phonetics also analyzes the acoustic properties of sound units, that is, the presence or absence of voicing in the pronunciation of various types of consonants. General classifications of sounds into vowels and consonants are based partly on articulatory properties and partly on acoustic properties.

General phonetics also examines coarticulation, as well as the principles of sound combinations and the influence of given sounds on adjacent sounds, reflected in various types of accommodation and assimilation. General phonetics studies the nature of the syllable, the principles by which sounds are combined into syllables, and the factors influencing syllabification. It examines the phonetic structure of words, and in particular the phenomenon of stress. It studies such intonational means as pitch, pauses, intensity, and the duration of the individual parts of a sentence.

Applied phonetics studies all the above features as applied to a given language and in relation to the functions performed by specific phonetic phenomena or units. Applied phonetics may be descriptive (synchronic) or historical (diachronic). Historical phonetics studies the evolution of a language’s sound system. The phonetic and phonological aspects of applied phonetics form an entity, since all phonetic units find expression indirectly, by means of a language’s semantic units.

Experimental methods are widely used in phonetics. Specialized apparatus are used in instrumental, or experimental, phonetic studies. The method of palatography determines the points of contact between the tongue and the palate during articulation. The position of the speech organs and their movement may be observed by means of X rays. Oscillography makes it possible to analyze the duration, pitch, and intensity of sounds, and spectrography provides a general acoustic picture of sounds. Other methods used in phonetics study the ways in which sounds are perceived by speakers of a given language and greatly facilitate the phonological analysis of such sounds.

Phonetics has a number of practical applications, as in the development of phonetic transcription and of orthographic systems. It facilitates the teaching of correct pronunciation, especially of foreign languages, and is used to correct speech defects in logopedics and in the education of the deaf. Information gained from phonetic studies helps increase the efficiency of means of communication.

The mechanisms by which speech sounds are produced were first examined in the 17th century, in works by J. P. de Bonet, J. Wallis, and J. C. Amman on the teaching of deaf-mutes. In the late 18th century the Russian physiologist Kh. Kratsenshtein originated the acoustic theory of vowels, which was further developed in the mid-19th century by H. Helmholtz. In the mid-19th century the German physiologist E. W. von Brücke studied the anatomy and physiology of the production of speech sounds. The German linguist E. Sievers, in Grundzüge der Lautphysiologie (1876; 2nd ed., Grundzüge der Phonetik, 1881), was the first to study speech sounds from a linguistic point of view. The works of H. Sweet, O. Jespersen, and M. Grammont played an important role in the development of phonetics.

In Russia, major contributions to the development of general phonetics were made by I. A. Baudouin de Courtenay and his students V. A. Bogoroditskii and L. V. Shcherba. Of great importance were the works of the Soviet linguist A. I. Tomson, among them General Linguistics (1906). At the present time, aspects of general and applied phonetics are dealt with by the Soviet linguists R. I. Avanesov, L. R. Zinder, M. I. Matusevich, and A. A. Reformatskii.

REFERENCES

Matusevich, M. I. Vvedenie v obshchuiu fonetiku, 3rd ed. Moscow, 1959.
Zinder, L. R. Obshchaia fonetika. Leningrad, 1960.
Essen, O. von. Allgemeine und angewandte Phonetik, 3rd ed. Berlin, 1962.
Abercrombie, D. Elements of General Phonetics. Edinburgh, 1967.
Manual of Phonetics. Amsterdam, 1968.
Malmberg, B. La Phonétique. Paris, 1968.

L. R. ZINDER

phonetics

[fə′ned·iks] (linguistics) The study of the production or articulation and perception of speech as well as the acoustic characteristics of the sounds produced.

phonetics


phonetics

 [fo-net´iks] the science of vocal sounds.

pho·net·ics

(fō-net'iks), The science of speech and of pronunciation. Synonym(s): phonology

pho·net·ics

(fŏ-net'iks) The science of speech and of pronunciation.

phonetics

The branch of linguistics concerned with the study of the speech sounds (phonemes) of a language and their classification and representation.

pho·net·ics

(fŏ-net'iks) Science of speech and pronunciation. Phonetic tests are used to determine vertical dimensions of occlusion (e.g., in sounding 'ch,''j,' and 's,' anterior teeth are brought closer together).

phonetics


Related to phonetics: phonetic alphabet
  • noun

Words related to phonetics

noun the branch of acoustics concerned with speech processes including its production and perception and acoustic analysis

Related Words

  • acoustics
  • speech sound
  • phone
  • sound
  • infection
  • assimilate
  • dissimilate
  • shift
  • long
  • short
  • tense
  • lax
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