It depends on what author you believe. I like how Peter Avery and Susan Ehrlich describe the /h/ as a voiceless vowel. This is due to the fact that even if it is a fricative, the place of articulation will vary depending on the vowel after it. For example, the production of the /h/ will be different in the words 'heel' and 'hot'... the place of articulation varies, though the manner of articulation doesn't (like in vowels). I hope this helps.
I'm using the adaptation of the IPA that Peter Avery uses in his book "Teaching American English Pronunciation". I find it a lot easier for students to understand, as /j/ might be confused for /dʒ/ at the beginning by some students who aren't familiar with the IPA. Avery's adaptation of the IPA also changes some symbols in the vowels, which seem to help first time students in the matter.
these are my answers for the dictation part: year j ??? thing 0 interdental fricative patch p bilabial stop fake f labiodental fricative nose n alveolar nasal year r palatal liquid thing ng velar nasal patch tʃ palatal affricate thick k velar stop nose z alveolar fricative
The video utilizes an adaptation of the IPA, suggested by Peter Avery and Susan Ehrlich in their book "Teaching American English Pronunciation". This adaptation is very similar to the one Marianne Celce-Muria uses in one of her books as well. The idea of using an adaptation is to make it easier or more understandable for students of the subject. So, in the adapted IPA, the initial sound for year would be /y/, whereas in the traditional IPA the intial symbol for year would be /j/.
omg. can’t believe i understood this so easy comparing to sitting at lectures
That's really so informative. Why I don't hear or recognize native speakers saying dg sound clearly
Wonderful !!!!!
Perfect video .. PLEASE keep publishing such informative phonetics videos.
Hello professor
Thank you so much for your priceless advice and interesting guidance. I really appreciate your job.
You are a great teacher thank you soo much 🌹
"Stops cannot be extended..."
Not me over here like "ppppppppppppppppppp"
This is very useful, thank you so much.
Bravo! What a concise and lucid explanation, carry on.
KABIR ALI TOOR
FORMER VISITING LECTURER UNIVERSITY OF NAROWAL
Thanks professor! It was really helpful
Thank you for your video! It's so helpful! What about /h/? Is it a glottal fricative?
It depends on what author you believe. I like how Peter Avery and Susan Ehrlich describe the /h/ as a voiceless vowel. This is due to the fact that even if it is a fricative, the place of articulation will vary depending on the vowel after it. For example, the production of the /h/ will be different in the words 'heel' and 'hot'... the place of articulation varies, though the manner of articulation doesn't (like in vowels). I hope this helps.
@@RodCortesEdu Yes, that is helpful! Thank you for responding! :)
No offense to my professor. But I feel this helped me understand better than my class.
1000th subscriber🎉🎉🎉🎉
Great!!
Thank youuuuuuu so much 🥰🥰🥰🥰
I'm hearing sir SV lol
Wondering why you use /y/ instead of /j/?
I'm using the adaptation of the IPA that Peter Avery uses in his book "Teaching American English Pronunciation". I find it a lot easier for students to understand, as /j/ might be confused for /dʒ/ at the beginning by some students who aren't familiar with the IPA. Avery's adaptation of the IPA also changes some symbols in the vowels, which seem to help first time students in the matter.
Sir I am suffer with articulation disorder. I cannot pronounce S, Sh, T and D sounds clear.
im finna fail soooo hard bro 😞
these are my answers for the dictation part:
year
j
???
thing
0
interdental fricative
patch
p
bilabial stop
fake
f
labiodental fricative
nose
n
alveolar nasal
year
r
palatal liquid
thing
ng
velar nasal
patch
tʃ
palatal affricate
thick
k
velar stop
nose
z
alveolar fricative
The video utilizes an adaptation of the IPA, suggested by Peter Avery and Susan Ehrlich in their book "Teaching American English Pronunciation". This adaptation is very similar to the one Marianne Celce-Muria uses in one of her books as well. The idea of using an adaptation is to make it easier or more understandable for students of the subject. So, in the adapted IPA, the initial sound for year would be /y/, whereas in the traditional IPA the intial symbol for year would be /j/.