Name the articulators for the first sound in 'mouse'.
Lips
This stage provides the "wind" or airflow for speech.
respiration
The branch that studies the movement of the tongue, lips, and other speech organs.
articulatory phonetics
This term describes the pronunciation habits of a person from a specific region.
accent
In this theory, the vocal cords are known as the _____.
source
Name the articulators for the first sound in 'take'.
tongue and alveolar ridge
The vibration of the vocal folds happens in this stage.
phonation
The branch that deals with the physical properties of sound waves.
acoustic phonetics
This term describes a variety of a language with its own unique words and grammar rules.
dialect
The vocal tract (mouth and throat) acts as this, changing the source sound.
filter
These two articulators make the sound at the start of 'very'.
teeth and lower lip
Moving the tongue and lips to make different sounds is part of this stage.
articulation
If you're looking at a sound spectrogram, you are working in this branch.
acoustic phonetics
The general term for the study of the sounds of human speech.
phonetics
As you learn how to move your articulators properly to procude specific sounds, you develop...
articulatory position
Which articulators are responsible for the first sound in the word 'ship'?
Tongue and hard palate
This stage comes after respiration but before articulation.
phonation
The branch concerned with how the ear and brain interpret sound signals.
auditory phonetics
TRUE/FALSE: dialect is often associated with particular geographical region, while accent is not
false
To make an 'eee' vs. an 'ooo' sound, you change the shape of this.
Oral/nasal Cavities (vocal tract)
Which articulators are responsible for the first sound in the word 'go'?
Tongue and velum
The name for the collective process of respiration, phonation, and articulation.
speech production
This branch would study how a baby learns to move its mouth to make a 'p' sound.
articulatory phonetics
This theory states that a source sound is shaped by the vocal tract to create speech.
Source-Filter Theory
What is located in larynx and what does it do?
Vocal cords. Open/close, hence vibrate.