Phonetics
Phonetics (from the Greek word phone = sound/voice) is the study of speech sounds (voice). It is concerned with the actual nature of the sounds and their production, as opposed to phonology, which operates at the level of sound systems and linguistic units called phonemes. Discussions of meaning (semantics) do not enter at this level of linguistic analysis. Phones, the objects of study in phonetics, are actual speech sounds as uttered by human beings. While written languages and alphabets are obviously (in most cases) closely related to the sounds of speech, strictly speaking, phoneticians are more concerned with the sounds of speech than the symbols used to represent them. So close is the relationship between them however, that many dictionaries list the study of the symbols (more accurately semiotics) as a part of phonetic studies. Phonetics has three main branches:
- articulatory phonetics, concerned with the positions and movements of the lips, tongue, and other speech organs in producing speech;
- acoustic phonetics, concerned with the properties of the sound waves; and
- auditory phonetics, concerned with speech perception.
See also
- List of phonetics topics
- Speech processing
- Acoustics
- biometric word list
- Phonetics departments at universities
- IPA and X-SAMPA.
External links and references
honetics
Ponetics
Phnetics
Phoetics
Phontics
Phoneics
Phonetcs
Phonetis
Phonetic
hPonetics
Pohnetics
Phnoetics
Phoentics
Phonteics
Phoneitcs
Phonetcis
Phonetisc
Phonetic
PPhonetics
Phhonetics
Phoonetics
Phonnetics
Phoneetics
Phonettics
Phonetiics
Phoneticcs
Phoneticss
honetics
ponetics
phnetics
phoetics
phontics
phoneics
phonetcs
phonetis
phonetic
hponetics
pohnetics
phnoetics
phoentics
phonteics
phoneitcs
phonetcis
phonetisc
phonetic
pphonetics
phhonetics
phoonetics
phonnetics
phoneetics
phonettics
phonetiics
phoneticcs
phoneticss