Uzbekistan state world languages university


I Acoustic Phonetics studies the



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I Acoustic Phonetics studies the


j 1 >; y#.' $ . g S. acoustic properties of sounds (quantity,
c / Л ;> LouibuW bV • X' . ' . • A . , , . . t , f
N v. • ..g. ^ timber/voice quality, intensity, the pitch
' 1 *. / .й: f of the voice and temporal factor) in
/ ; t terms of the frequency of vibration and
• the amplitude of vibration in relation to
' - - \ time. The analysis begins with a
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microphone, which converts the air liinvi'inenl into corresponding electrical activity. While investigating the acoustic of speech sounds special laboratory equipment is employed: spectrograph, llilunograph, sound analyzing & sound synthesizing machines.
Auditory Phonetics is aimed at investigating the hearing process which is tin1 brain activity. Auditory Phonetics and Acoustic Phonetics are very closely • iiiiiieclcd.


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Fu actional Phonetics presupposes investigating the discriminatory (tllilfinclive) function of speech sounds.








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Phonetics can be divided into several types like:
General phonetics. It studies universal positions of sound articulation (for instance, identification of sounds according to the position the differences of labial, tongue and throat consonants, according to the ways of articulation of plosive, fricative and plosive-fricative features), although, general acoustic features of sounds.
Specific phonetics. It investigates above mentioned issues in the samples of certain languages. Specific phonetics researches phonetics in the shapes of historical and modern, synchronic and diachronic, descriptive and experimental sides.
Comparative phonetics investigates vowel and consonant phonemes, their phonetic changes and others in thecomparative aspect of several genetically related and non-related languages.
Phonology(sometimes called phonemics or phonematics) is the study of how sounds are used in languages to convey meaning. The term of phonology (Greek phone - sound, logos - science) appeared in linguistics in the necessity of differentiating functional (linguistic) sides of speech sounds from the physiological-acoustic (physic) sides in the end of XIX century. It studies the rules governing the structure, distribution, and sequencing of speech sounds and the shape of syllables. It deals with the sounds systems of a language by treating phoneme as the point of departure.
With another word, phonetics deals with sounds and phonology deals with phonemes. Or else phonology deals with language sounds and phonetics deals with human speech sounds.
Phonetics and phonology have two levels: segmental
and suprasegmental. Segmental phonology studies phonemes realized in avarious speech sound. So it may be called phonemics. Suprasegmental phonology (prosodies) studies the distinctive features realized in syllables, stress, and intonation.
The fundamental concept of phonemics is the phoneme which is the smallest meaningless unit of a language and which forms, distinguishes words and morphemes. The linguistic form and content are described by other branches of linguistics.
At a given time, the set of phonemes in a language is a closed set (like function words and syntactic rules). The set of phonemes changes only over time. English, for instance, has lost the phonemes [x] and [£]. English has also gained phonemes by borrowing foreign words with the sounds [z] and [Z]. Neither of these sounds was phonemes in English until they entered the language in numerous


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muds borrowed from Norman French after 1066. Similarly, the sound [t] was not (ми I of Russian until after the Christianization in 988, when many Greek words I niilnining [fj were borrowed by the Slavs.
The Phonological typology deals with thecomparison of units of the Jtliimological level of language. It engages in theallocation of phonological • llllrrcntial signs, defining their universality, study of thephonological structure of liiiilUiages, classification of languages based on their phonological features (e.g. tonic hi id atonic languages), defining thephonemic structure of world languages and many nllicrs. For a long time,the Prague linguistic school was the center of Phonological Ivpulogy. A certain contribution to thedevelopment of Phonological typology was innde by N.S.Trubetskoy who is considered the founder of Typology of Phonological 'ilnns.
Phonological typology involves comparing languages according to the number or type of sound they contain. Although there are inevitable problems in dividing the sounds of any language into separate abstract units (phonemes), linguists usually compare languages according to the number of different groups which participate in meaningful sound contrasts (i.e. phonemes) rather than the loliil number of actual speech sounds. Every language has a fairly small inventory id these sets or phonemes. Moreover, the number varies from language to liliimmgc. In comparison, Hawaiian has only 18; Kabardian has over 80, and the Miibiim language is reported to have 141 phonemes or mutually contrastive sets of mi Hinds, Abhasian has 60.
The second aspect of phonological typology classifies languages according In the type of sounds present or absent in each language. Some sounds are only I ill cly found in languages.
Unusual sounds include: the Czech and Slovak voiced sound [h], Arabic |iliinyngeal. Arabic, English, new-Greek, Bashkirian [o] and [э], in Danish [6] iiiil.V, Uzbek, Arabic[Kj, [f], [ҳ].
Unusual omissions also include labial (nearly completely absent in I 'hrmkec, Tlingit), nasals (absent from several Salish languages), Sibiliants Idli'ifiU from Hawaiian).
No known language entirely lacks either obstruent or sonorant. No known lnii|iimge entirely lacks either vowels or consonants, although Rotoras has only six I iiiumimnts, certain Northwest Caucasian languages such as Kabardian have only пни vowel.


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Languages are also classified into consonantal if the consonants are absolutely more than vowels and non-consonantal if the number of vowels is more, equal or even nearly equal (A. Isachenko; T. Kovalev).


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