Language

[Introduction to Linguistics] (OLD) Vowels – Production and Transcription



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For practice describing the consonants. http://depts.washington.edu/lingsup/ling200/cons-descr.php

For listening to all the sounds
https://www.llas.ac.uk/materialsbank/mb081/page_09.htm

For practicing transcription and matching English words.
http://www.tedpower.co.uk/phonetics.htm

Today we look at the production and transcription of English in English. There is a lot in this video, and there is no way you can grasp it all in one go. Please take the time to study the IPA chart, and do your own practice transcriptions.

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15 thoughts on “[Introduction to Linguistics] (OLD) Vowels – Production and Transcription
  1. Thank you for posting this easy to follow video with very concise and clear is xplanations. A minor correction would make things closer to the IPA perscriptd spelling. The /i/ you write for beat is a short vowel when actually that should be transcribed with the long vowel transcription /i:/ once again thanks for the video, really appreciate the simplicity of the content. Keep it up!

  2. Isn't the little circle under the /l/ actually the diacritic for devoicing whereas a little ['] under it is the diacritic for the syllabic l instead? I'm confused

  3. Thank you for the video. It is very helpful! Actually, I found the vowel [ɑ] in English is kind of confusing. Though the transcriptions of the 'a' in 'father' and 'o' in 'hot' are both [ɑ] in many dictionaries, they do sound quite different to me. I think the reason is not that I pronoun 'father' in the British way. I wonder, in this case, am I wrong about the prononciation? Or that, they are indeed different in prononciation, but written the same way as they do not constitute a minimal pair in English maybe? Thanks a lot!

  4. thank you so much for this i was super worried that i might fail my final in linguistics but thanks to you im less worried

  5. the transcription is off! Bet is transcribed /bet/ in both american english and RP according to both the cambridge dictionary and the longman pronunciation dictionary. It sounds like you have an American accent so I'm just confused at some of the letters that you use in your transcription.

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