Rabu, 22 Oktober 2014

Phonetics and Phonology

PHONETICS AND PHONOLOGY

An Introduction to Phonetics and Phonology

Version 4.0 (August, 2014)
Robert Mannell, Felicity Cox and Jonathan Harrington
© Department of Linguistics, Macquarie University, 2000-2014

PHONETICS AND PHONOLOGY TOPICS

Section A: Phonetics

  1. An Introduction to Speech Production
  2. Consonants
  3. Vowels
  4. Vowel Systems
  5. Airstream and Laryngeal Features in Speech Production
  6. Complex Articulations
  7. Coarticulation
  8. Impressionistic Studies of Australian English Phonetics
  9. General Phonetics Revision Exercises

Section B: Transcription

  1. The International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA)
  2. a. Phonemic (Broad) Transcription of Australian Englishb. Mitchell-Delbridge system of AE Phonemic Transcription
  3. Phonetic (Narrow) Transcription of Australian English
  4. Australian English Transcription Practice Exercises

Section C: Phonology

  1. Introduction to Phonology
  2. Phoneme and Allophone
  3. The Syllable and the Foot
  4. Distinctive Features
  5. Generative Phonology
  6. The Phonology of Intonation
  7. The Phonetics and Phonology of Australian Aboriginal Languages

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Which topics do I need to study?

This page contains links to the main topics in the Phonetics and Phonology on-line resource. Topics in this resource are used by students undertaking a number of units. Not all topics listed above will be required topics for your unit. To determine which topics are required by your unit, return to your unit's home page (via the Speech Resource Pages link in the left column) and go to your unit's topic outline page.

In what order should I study them?

For units with regular lectures, the topics should be studied in the order indicated in your unit's lecture and tutorial timetable pages. If you are doing a distance unit your unit guide will provide a topic reading schedule that aligns with the due dates for your assessment tasks.

How do I set up phonetic fonts and sound?

It is essential that you have the correct phonetic font and sound player installed and so that you can correctly view the phonetic characters and so you can hear the many speech files associated with much of this material. To find out how to do this go to the Speech Help Pages (see the link in the left column).

How do I reference these pages?

You may reference this web resource as follows:-
R. Mannell, F. Cox and J. Harrington (2014), An Introduction to Phonetics and Phonology, Macquarie University.
To the above, you should append (in brackets) the web address and the date that you accessed the pages.

Selasa, 21 Oktober 2014

Vocabulary

"Vocab" redirects here. For the song by Fugees, see Vocab (song).
A person's vocabulary is the set of words within a language that are familiar to that person. A vocabulary usually develops with age, and serves as a useful and fundamental tool for communication and acquiring knowledge. Acquiring an extensive vocabulary is one of the largest challenges in learning a second language.

Definition and usage

Vocabulary is commonly defined as "all the words known and used by a particular person".[1] Knowing a word, however, is not as simple as simply being able to recognize or use it. There are several aspects of word knowledge which are used to measure word knowledge.

Productive and receptive

The first major distinction that must be made when evaluating word knowledge is whether the knowledge is productive (also called achieve) or receptive (also called receive) and even within those opposing categories, there is often no clear distinction. Words that are generally understood when heard or read or seen constitute a person's receptive vocabulary. These words may range from well known to barely known (see degree of knowledge below). A person's receptive vocabulary is the larger of the two. For example, although a young child may not yet be able to speak, write, or sign, he or she may be able to follow simple commands and appear to understand a good portion of the language to which he or she is exposed. In this case, the child's receptive vocabulary is likely tens, if not hundreds of words but his or her active vocabulary is zero. When that child learns to speak or sign, however, the child's active vocabulary begins to increase. It is possible for the productive vocabulary to be larger than the receptive vocabulary, for example in a second-language learner who has learned words through study rather than exposure, and can produce them, but has difficulty recognizing them in conversation.
Productive vocabulary, therefore, generally refers to words which can be produced within an appropriate context and match the intended meaning of the speaker or signer. As with receptive vocabulary, however, there are many degrees at which a particular word may be considered part of an active vocabulary. Knowing how to pronounce, sign, or write a word does not necessarily mean that the word has been used to correctly or accurately reflect the intended message of the utterance, but it does reflect a minimal amount of productive knowledge.

Degree of knowledge

Within the receptive–productive distinction lies a range of abilities which are often referred to as degree of knowledge. This simply indicates that a word gradually enters a person's vocabulary over a period of time as more aspects of word knowledge are learnt. Roughly, these stages could be described as:
  1. Never encountered the word.
  2. Heard the word, but cannot define it.
  3. Recognize the word due to context or tone of voice.
  4. Able to use the word and understand the general and/or intended meaning, but cannot clearly explain it.
  5. Fluent with the word – its use and definition.

Depth of knowledge

The differing degrees of word knowledge imply a greater depth of knowledge, but the process is more complex than that. There are many facets to knowing a word, some of which are not hierarchical so their acquisition does not necessarily follow a linear progression suggested by degree of knowledge. Several frameworks of word knowledge have been proposed to better operationalise this concept. One such framework includes nine facets:
  1. orthography - written form
  2. phonology - spoken form
  3. reference - meaning
  4. semantics - concept and reference
  5. register - appropriacy of use
  6. collocation - lexical neighbours
  7. word associations
  8. syntax - grammatical function
  9. morphology - word parts

Types of vocabulary

Listed in order of most ample to most limited:[2][3]

Reading vocabulary

A literate person's reading vocabulary is all the words he or she can recognize when reading. This is generally the largest type of vocabulary simply because a reader tends to be exposed to more words by reading than by listening. In many cases, notably Chinese characters, as in Chinese and Japanese kanji, where the pronunciation is not indicated by the written word, some words may be part of the written vocabulary but not the commonly spoken language. For example, a Chinese speaker may not recognize that 麒麟 (giraffe) is pronounced qi lin, a Japanese speaker may not recognize that 麒麟 (giraffe) is pronounced kirin.

Listening vocabulary

A person's listening vocabulary is all the words he or she can recognize when listening to speech. People may still understand words they were not exposed to before using cues such as tone, gestures, the topic of discussion and the social context of the conversation.

Speaking vocabulary

A person's speaking vocabulary is all the words he or she uses in speech. It is likely to be a subset of the listening vocabulary. Due to the spontaneous nature of speech, words are often misused. This misuse – though slight and unintentional – may be compensated by facial expressions, tone of voice, or hand gestures.

Writing vocabulary

Words are used in various forms of writing from formal essays to Twitter feeds. Many written words do not commonly appear in speech. Writers generally use a limited set of words when communicating: for example
  • if there are a number of synonyms, a writer will have his own preference as to which of them to use.
  • he is unlikely to use technical vocabulary relating to a subject in which he has no knowledge or interest.

Focal vocabulary

Focal vocabulary is a specialized set of terms and distinctions that is particularly important to a certain group: those with a particular focus of experience or activity. A lexicon, or vocabulary, is a language's dictionary: its set of names for things, events, and ideas. Some linguists believe that lexicon influences people's perception of things, the Sapir–Whorf hypothesis. For example, the Nuer of Sudan have an elaborate vocabulary to describe cattle. The Nuer have dozens of names for cattle because of the cattle's particular histories, economies, and environments[clarification needed]. This kind of comparison has elicited some linguistic controversy, as with the number of "Eskimo words for snow". English speakers with relevant specialised knowledge can also display elaborate and precise vocabularies for snow and cattle when the need arises.[4][5]

Vocabulary growth

Main article: Vocabulary development
During its infancy, a child instinctively builds a vocabulary. Infants imitate words that they hear and then associate those words with objects and actions. This is the listening vocabulary. The speaking vocabulary follows, as a child's thoughts become more reliant on his/her ability to self-express without relying on gestures or babbling. Once the reading and writing vocabularies start to develop, through questions and education, the child starts to discover the anomalies and irregularities of language.
In first grade, a child who can read learns about twice as many words as one who cannot. Generally, this gap does not narrow later. This results in a wide range of vocabulary by age five or six, when an English-speaking child will have learned about 1500 words.[6]
After leaving school, vocabulary growth reaches a plateau[clarification needed]. People usually then expand their vocabularies by e.g. reading, playing word games, and by participating in vocabulary-related programs. Exposure to traditional print media teaches correct spelling and vocabulary, while exposure to text messaging leads to more relaxed word acceptability constraints.[7]

Rabu, 08 Oktober 2014

Inilah warna - warni STBA Buddhi ~

Hay teman teman semua, selamat datang di blog saya. Posting kali ini saya akan memperkenalkan kehidupan yang terjadi seputar STBA Buddhi :-)

Jadwal kuliah untuk STBA sendiri yaitu dari hari Senin sampai Jumat, yang berlangsung dari mulai   pukul 17:30 - 21:00
Dan para penghuni class of STBA sendiri itu rata-rata adalah seorang pekerja. Kalau yang masih nganggur itu sih DL ! HAHAHA
Untuk hari Senin sampai Rabu terdapat dua mata kuliah. Sementara hari Kamis sampai Jumat hanya satu mata kuliah. Dan hari Kamis adalah hari paling merdeka, karena satu amat kuliah itu hanya berlangsung selama satu setengah jam. Namun untuk hari Jumat itu satu mata kuliah, tetapi berlangsung selama dua jam. Bete sihhh, tapi rela bagi-bagiii ???
Mayoritas mahasiswa STBA Buddhi semester I ini lebih banyak yang mengambil S1. D3 hanya beberapa maybe. Dan rata-rata umur daripada mahasiswa STBA ini berumur 20 tahunan. Maybe saya yang paling muda + unyu WekaWekaWeka
Dan mayoritas lebih banyak berjenis kelamin wanita. Jumlah mahasiswi nya gue gak tahu jumlahnya berapa. Kalo pengen tahu, hitung aja sendiri ! Pria hanya berjumlah 6 org. Dan maybe, cuma gue yang paling tampan. Tragis memang, tapi apa daya ~
Sekian dolooo detail dari STBA ini, karena gue mao pulang. YukDadahBaBye ~ HIHIHI