The Sounds Of English, An Introduction To Phonetics (Classic Reprint) !!HOT!!
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All textbooks on phonetics and phonology contain at least some discussion of nasals and nasalization. A classic phonetics textbook is Ladefoged 1982. Silverman 2017 is a recent phonology textbook that contains a detailed description of the articulatory and acoustic properties of nasals and relates these to their phonological patterning. A similar perspective is taken in Ohala and Ohala 1993. The best source for a cross-linguistic survey of nasals and nasalized sounds is chapter 4 of Ladefoged and Maddieson 1996, which contains a wealth of data and references. Two edited volumes that focus on nasals and nasalization are Ferguson, et al. 1975 and Huffman and Krakow 1993. Ferguson, et al. 1975 is a collection of papers that discuss various aspects of nasals and nasalization; some of the contributions are based on data from the Stanford Language Universals Project. Huffman and Krakow 1993 is a collection of state-of-the-art information on both the phonetics and the phonology of nasals and nasalization. Cohn 1993 is a useful summary of previous work on nasality and contains a database of languages with nasalization processes.
Now in a new edition, this unique interactive introduction to the study of phonetics shows students how to examine the entire range of human sounds through a series of 124 introspective experiments carried out in their own vocal tracts. It systematically covers all types of speech modification (breath, voice, whisper, creak), articulation (the ways in which the air stream is finally modulated to generate specific types of sound), and prosodic features (stress, syllable, tone, intonation). This text also includes a chapter on sound systems--the ways in which particular languages utilize and systematize the universal sound-producing potential of humans. By actually articulating sounds and attending to the motor sensations they produce, readers acquire a deep, personal awareness of the principles of phonetic analysis and classification. This second edition of A Practical Introduction to Phonetics features a new format and text design; updated use of phonetic symbols in line with the latest International Phonetic Alphabet Chart (1996); a revised further reading section that includes recent publications; and additional references to several important new publications. Informed throughout by recent research in aerodynamics and acoustics, this highly practical text is ideal for courses in introduction to phonetics and will be of interest to a wide range of students and teachers of languages, linguistics, speech therapy, and anthropology.
"[A]n introduction to general phonetics that integrates the articulatory and the acoustic aspects of the subject in a way that few other introductory works do; that gives a comprehensive view of the whole subject."--Kritikon Litterarum (on the previous edition) 2b1af7f3a8