How to produce any vowel

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  • Опубликовано: 4 янв 2025

Комментарии • 75

  • @pm71241
    @pm71241 6 лет назад +26

    I like the Calepari vowel diagram. It seems to be more compatible with Danish than the unmodified IPA vowels.
    Danish has its own phonetic alphabet ("Dania") which fits the language, but it's my impression that many IPA vowels need diacritic to be correct. (and some times the difference is really noticeable, especially with the a sounds and the e)
    This diagram seems to more easily capture Danish vowels.

    • @ConlangKrishna
      @ConlangKrishna  6 лет назад +9

      Yeah, the Canepari system has its advantages, especially for languages with many different vowel qualities (like Danish), and for comparing dialects, that often only differ slightly in their vowel qualities. Unfortunately, Canepari's system does not seem to be used much in the scientific world...

  • @robertmaendeleo4771
    @robertmaendeleo4771 4 года назад +14

    Your lessons are really inspiring

  • @espositogregory
    @espositogregory 4 года назад +2

    While making a script for s conlang, I tourd with a system which acted as though “vowel” was a single letter which possessed slight non-diacritical changes to describe the manners/places of articulation progression.

  • @lslane5405
    @lslane5405 7 лет назад +17

    Nice video! The ɶ sound (number 12) does seem to be really rare, but it occurs in Austrian German, in words such as 'Seil' and 'weil'. A person who speaks with a 'well-educated' Viennese accent (I like to call it 'high Austrian') is unlikely to produce this sound, but people with a strong accent (and often living on the countryside) will produce this. Sources: IPA handbook and living in Austria :)

  • @wangsiyue3794
    @wangsiyue3794 6 лет назад +2

    OMG!!! Thank you sooooo much for explaining vowel production!!! I've always had a hard time differentiating and producing these sounds!!!!

  • @lawrenceleung1650
    @lawrenceleung1650 6 лет назад +2

    Congratulations to Krishna for your excellent and admirable work!

  • @johannesh7610
    @johannesh7610 7 лет назад +5

    Very good summary and you pronounce them all! Helped my a lot (we try to create a new language and are looking for vowels as a first step). I'm glad to have found those tables (especially the last one lists interestingly many vowels)
    Thanks!

  • @katemctaggart5085
    @katemctaggart5085 4 года назад +5

    These videos are great, thank you so much! I feel like you will get me through the ear training part of my Speech Therapy training :)

  • @aprenderfalando4071
    @aprenderfalando4071 3 года назад

    Finally I found who explain in the way that I understand. Thank

  • @ramzy-6566
    @ramzy-6566 2 года назад

    we hope more video, you can update some.

  • @Darihmaster
    @Darihmaster 7 лет назад +3

    Wow. I subscribed, Thank you very very much!! This videos is really good and I like that you pronounced each sound, it really helped me!

  • @mauroncard
    @mauroncard 4 года назад +2

    What an awesome job! Congrats!

  • @glossy-jimin
    @glossy-jimin 3 года назад

    Thank you. I'm an aspiring language learner but I have some difficulty distinguishing between sounds. This opened up my eyes a little 👍

  • @skeptic781
    @skeptic781 4 года назад +2

    7:23 some speakers of swedish use that instead of the one above which I personally tend to use. I don't find it weird though

  • @钟鱼-u3l
    @钟鱼-u3l 5 лет назад +1

    Good video, thank you! Help me a lot.I really hope more examples of each vowel.As a foreigner I can hardly recognize the different between them.

  • @Pat-Van-Canada
    @Pat-Van-Canada 3 года назад +1

    like colours on the colour wheel !

  • @SeintDirk
    @SeintDirk 6 лет назад +2

    Where can İ find out the Lower-Mid with Back-Central vowel sound?
    Note: See on 8:04

    • @ConlangKrishna
      @ConlangKrishna  6 лет назад

      I did not add that sound, because it is very difficult to tell apart from its neighboring sounds. A non-rounded LMBC vowel would probably be perceived as an [ǝ]. A rounded LMBC vowel sounds almost the same as an [ɔ].
      I do not know of a language that has one specific LMBC phoneme.

    • @SeintDirk
      @SeintDirk 6 лет назад

      OK! thank u.

    • @Drazzz27
      @Drazzz27 6 лет назад

      Lower Mid Back Central (in CanIPA) can be found in Romanian. It is designated by the letter "ă" (in stressed position, unstressed "ă" may sound more centralized, like /ə/) . You can listen to an example word "ăsta" on forvo: forvo.com/word/ăsta/#ro
      or cărți: forvo.com/word/cărți
      The rounded version of this sound could be found in French 'bonnet' in neutral accent (according to Canepari's criteria), but it can be pronounced differently in mediatic Parisian and other accents, so I'm personally not sure if I would be able to actually recognize it and not confuse it with other sound on the recording. The one on forvo sounds about right.
      You can also listen to the name of the Igbo language in Igbo, it should have the same sound:
      forvo.com/word/igbo/

  • @fcp536
    @fcp536 5 лет назад +1

    Very interesting video! Bravo

  • @TheZenytram
    @TheZenytram 3 года назад +2

    WHY IPA dont use the last chart. it makes a whole lot more sense than that skewed mess they use.

    • @thealexdn-k9d
      @thealexdn-k9d 3 года назад

      First, because Canepari's system is not very compatible with computers (there are many characters that are not present in any Unicode sets);
      Second, there are enough diacritics in the official IPA to describe vowels closely enough, so Canepari is basically reinventing the wheel with all his weird symbols.
      Plus, IPA is actually just a system to write pronounciation independent from orthography of a given language (if it has one).

  • @mahdehassan9702
    @mahdehassan9702 6 лет назад +2

    Fantastic sir

  • @leelomchen3119
    @leelomchen3119 3 года назад +1

    fantastic

  • @nocheinmalkeinproblem5207
    @nocheinmalkeinproblem5207 2 месяца назад

    great video

  • @koveek
    @koveek 3 года назад +1

    I just found your channel! But it seems that you haven't uploaded anything since the last year. :/ You make very interesting content, which I was looking for, for a really long time. I hope you'll come back :^)

  • @sajans8149
    @sajans8149 7 лет назад +2

    wonderful

  • @dailyfrench
    @dailyfrench 3 года назад

    3:01 sounds of the vowels

  • @henriquequintana2143
    @henriquequintana2143 4 года назад +3

    Ótimo!!!!!

  • @ellyeyeimo4383
    @ellyeyeimo4383 2 года назад

    Thank you very helpful

  • @asifanowar423
    @asifanowar423 7 лет назад +2

    Thank you for such a nice video..I have a question .. that is how can I know whether I'm pronouncing the IPA vowels correctly?? And how do I know that how much do I need to open or close , spread or round my lips a particular vowel sound??

    • @nanalang7665
      @nanalang7665 7 лет назад +4

      Asif Anowar i beleive there is a tool called “praat” that can listen to your voice and tell you what vowel you’re making... i’m not sure how hard it is to use though (i’ve never used it myself). Might be worth a try

    • @damienliles5387
      @damienliles5387 4 года назад +1

      @@nanalang7665 I checked into your tip. Turns out Praat is an audio transcription tool where the user can easily write in where each sound starts and ends. It actually doesn't do the transcription / sound analysis for you. Instead, you could check out this "IPA Chart with Sounds" page. www.internationalphoneticalphabet.org/ipa-sounds/ipa-chart-with-sounds/

  • @lizardstank
    @lizardstank 4 года назад +1

    2:50
    Do you know dah way

  • @funkchi
    @funkchi 7 лет назад +5

    Ha, Chinese and Korean have that central vowel 17. I don't know if it's a common vowel, but not many Non-Chinese or Non-Korean speaker could get it right.

    • @ConlangKrishna
      @ConlangKrishna  7 лет назад

      Bird Aqua True, it is quite rare, but also appears in some Slavic languages like Russian or Polish. Some languages use a vowel between 16 and 17, like Turkish.

    • @jellosapiens7261
      @jellosapiens7261 6 лет назад +1

      Yeah, the Korean 으 is often realized somewhere between 16 and 17. It's sometimes transcribed with the ipa character ɯ̽ to show that it's between the two, but to my ears it definitely feels higher than ɯ̽.

    • @altf4218
      @altf4218 6 лет назад +1

      The Romanian lettter â has a similar pronunciaton.

    • @quantumsoul3495
      @quantumsoul3495 6 лет назад

      @@altf4218 and î

  • @CrazyLeiFeng
    @CrazyLeiFeng 4 года назад +2

    Are the vowels from the Capenari diagram mapped against English words in RP or GA in any book or website?

    • @ConlangKrishna
      @ConlangKrishna  4 года назад

      I am pretty sure, Canepari has compared different dialects of English. You can find lots of free material in his webpage:
      www.canipa.net

    • @CrazyLeiFeng
      @CrazyLeiFeng 4 года назад

      @@ConlangKrishna Thx

  • @pkREX24
    @pkREX24 3 года назад +1

    I don't really get how the tongue positioning works. Is it referring to the tip? the whole thing? what?

    • @ConlangKrishna
      @ConlangKrishna  3 года назад

      With vowels, it is the whole tongue that moves. This usually happens unconsciously. Here is a link to the Encyclopedia Britannica article that shows different tongue positions. You can pronounce these words and try to feel the position of your tongue while doing this:
      "Phonetics - Suprasegmentals | Britannica" www.britannica.com/science/phonetics/Suprasegmentals

  • @jpzhang8290
    @jpzhang8290 2 года назад

    Wonder if these vowels are pronounced differently in concrete languages, say English or French?

  • @louiserocks1
    @louiserocks1 6 лет назад +4

    The oe (joined together) to me sounds exactly the same as the vowel in bird, hurt

    • @ConlangKrishna
      @ConlangKrishna  6 лет назад +4

      Theoretically, the vowel in "bird" is [ɜ], so it is less rounded and more central than [œ], so for [œ] the lips are rounded, for [ɜ] they are not.
      If you ask me, the difference is not a big one, especially in fast speech. ;-)

    • @thealexdn-k9d
      @thealexdn-k9d 3 года назад +1

      @@ConlangKrishna Actually, (according to known British linguist and phonetician Geoff Lindsey) there is an /əː/ sound in words like bird, nurse etc. in modern British English, not /ɜ/.
      Plus, some broad Australian and New Zealand accents (and even few British accents) actually do pronounce /œː/ or /øː/ in place of /ɜː/ or /əː/.

  • @FannomacritaireSuomi
    @FannomacritaireSuomi 3 года назад +1

    Playing with phonetics sounds messy but it's interesting as hell! I study phonetics at the university and totally love it

    • @ConlangKrishna
      @ConlangKrishna  3 года назад +1

      And Eurovision can be a great source of examples of rare languages!

  • @pm71241
    @pm71241 6 лет назад +3

    And 12 occurs often in Danish. Like in "smør" - /ˈsmɶɐ̯/ , butter.

  • @gide5489
    @gide5489 7 месяцев назад

    Nasal sounds?

  • @nguyennhuoclam105
    @nguyennhuoclam105 Год назад

    Hướng dẫn chơi đi

  • @ngochongnguyen3379
    @ngochongnguyen3379 5 лет назад +3

    😍😍😍😍😍

  • @slottraducoesbr2929
    @slottraducoesbr2929 4 года назад +2

    /æ/ is very hard. (My native language is portuguese Brazil)

    • @skeptic781
      @skeptic781 4 года назад +3

      It's hard for me and English is my native language. My Northern Irish accent uses the a vowel Instead

  • @tomkot
    @tomkot 5 лет назад +1

    ɶ is actually not so weird, it occurs in Swedish words like öra en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_front_rounded_vowel

    • @the_biblioklept2533
      @the_biblioklept2533 5 лет назад

      Tom Kot It is weird. It's only in 3 languages

    • @thealexdn-k9d
      @thealexdn-k9d 3 года назад

      @Tom Kot I guess, he meant that [ɶ] is quite rare as a phoneme.
      In case of Swedish (and Norwegian) [ɶ] is an allophone of /œ/ before /r/.

  • @grumpino8246
    @grumpino8246 5 лет назад +4

    the pronunciation of [e] is wrong, i think.

    • @yodamaster445
      @yodamaster445 4 года назад +1

      @Danilo Croce Italian e is [e̞], german e is [e]

    • @thealexdn-k9d
      @thealexdn-k9d 3 года назад

      @@yodamaster445 Actually, German /e/ is a bit hiɡher, than a cardinal /e/, so it's more like [e̝] (i.e. it's closer to /i/).

  • @atadcy4882
    @atadcy4882 4 года назад +4

    Omg it all sounds the same 🤯

    • @ConlangKrishna
      @ConlangKrishna  4 года назад +4

      True, many vowels are very close to eachother. And no language has them all. Practice, practice, practice. 😉

  • @benjaminhamm7530
    @benjaminhamm7530 2 года назад

    algo

  • @ChristianAMR
    @ChristianAMR 5 месяцев назад

    Krishnasya bhAsha

  • @ramamonato5039
    @ramamonato5039 Год назад

    /ˈdænɪəl ˈdʒəʊnz wəz ə ˈbrɪtɪʃ fəʊnɪˈtɪʃn. aɪ ˈlaɪk ɪm./