- The Organs of Speech
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Two Speech process
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Psychological
- formulating the concept at a linguistic level = in the brain
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Physiological (or) Articulatory
- making certain movements and produce particular patterns of sounds
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Physical or acoustic
- The movement of organs of speech creates disturbances in the air
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Other organs
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Auditing
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perception of vibrations in the air in the listener's ear drum
- Ear diagram
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Cognition
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The decoding of sounds
- Information Processing
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Speech Mechanism
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1. The respiratory system
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Lungs
- The most usual source of energy for vocal activity is provided by an air-stream expelled from the lungs
- Bronchial tubes
- windpipe or trachea
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2. The phonatory system
- 1. Larynx or voice-box
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2. Vocal cards (Vocal folds)
- Two folds of ligament and elastic tissue
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3. Glottis
- The opening between the vocal cords
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3. The articulatory system
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1. Nose
- Topic
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2. Lips
- Topic
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3. Mouth
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1. Tongue
- Topic
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2. Teeth
- Topic
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The roof of the mouth
- 1. Alveolar or Teeth palate
- 2.Hard palate
- 3. Soft palate (velum)
- 4. Uvula
- 4. The soft Palate (velum)
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Three group of body organs
- Trunk
- Throat
- head
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Air-stream mechanisms
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1. Pulmonic air-stream mechanisms
- Consists of the lungs and the respiratory muscles
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2. Glottalic air-stream mechanisms
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Larynx
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a) Open Glottis
- Air can pass through them quite freely
- Voiceless or Breathed
- Topic
- Air can pass through them quite freely
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b) Glottis in vibration
- Voiced
- Topic
- The opening and closing action
- 100-150 times in a man's voice
- 200-325 times in a woman's voice
- Constitutes the process called "phonation"
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c) Closed glottis
- Glottal stop Eg: cough, hiccups
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d) Narrowed glottis
- Whisper: soft hissing noise
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3. Velaric air-stream mechanisms
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Velum (soft palate) Eg: click
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1. Nasalized sounds
- Air can escape through nose and mouth
- 2. Lowered soft palate
- 3. Raised soft palate
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Initiators
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Used to pull air in
- b) Ingressive
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Used to push air out
- a) Egressive