Difference between revisions of "Articulatory Phonetics (definition)"

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Articulatory phonetics is concerned with how speech sounds are produced in the vocal tract.
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A particular field of phonetics which studies the physiological components of sound production. When a person produces a sound, they employ their tongue, teeth, hard pallet, soft pallet, glottis, vocal cords, diaphragm, etc. Articulatory phonetics looks specifically at each of these articulators and pays special attention to how each person uses them to produce a specific sound.
 
 
 
==See also==
 
==See also==
 
*[[Phonetics (definition)]]
 
*[[Phonetics (definition)]]

Revision as of 02:46, 8 December 2011

A particular field of phonetics which studies the physiological components of sound production. When a person produces a sound, they employ their tongue, teeth, hard pallet, soft pallet, glottis, vocal cords, diaphragm, etc. Articulatory phonetics looks specifically at each of these articulators and pays special attention to how each person uses them to produce a specific sound.

See also

External Links

References