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 Fields and subfields within
linguistics.

Cognitive linguistics

Phonetics is the study of speech sounds. 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 do not enter at this level of linguistic analysis.

The object of study of phonetics are called phones. Phones are actual speech sounds as uttered by human beings.

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.

There are several hundred different phones recognized by the International Phonetic Association (IPA) and transcribed in their International Phonetic Alphabet.

Of all the speech sounds that a human vocal tract can create, different languages vary considerably in the number of these sounds that they use. Languages can contain from 2 to 30 vowels and 5 to over 100 consonants (roughly, anyone know exact numbers?). The total number of phonemes in languages varies from as few as 10 in the Pirahã language, 11 in Rotokas (spoken in Papua New Guinea), and 12 in Hawaiian, to as many as 147 in !Xu (spoken in southern Africa, in the vicinity of the Kalahari desert). These may range from familiar sounds like /t/, /s/ or /m/ to very unusual ones produced in extraordinary ways (see: clicks, phonation, airstream mechanism). The English language has about 13 vowel and 26 consonant phonemes, some of which have multiple allophones. This differs from the lay definition based on the Latin alphabet, where there are 21 consonants and 5 vowels (although sometimes y and w are included as vowels).

Phonetics was studied as early as 2500 years ago in ancient India .

See also: Speech processing, Acoustics, NATO phonetic alphabet, biometric word list

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