Difference between revisions of "Phonetics"

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'''Phonetics''' is the subfield of linguistics that is concerned with the acoustic, articulatory, and perceptual properties of speech sounds.
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'''Phonetics''' is the subfield of linguistics that is concerned with the [[articulation|articulatory]], [[acoustics|acoustic]], and [[perception|perceptual]] properties of [[speech sound]]s. It has corresponding subfields: [[Articulatory Phonetics]], which explores how speech sounds are produced; [[Acoustic Phonetics]], which looks at the acoustic properties of speech sounds; and [[Speech Perception]], which examines the auditory system as well as the ways in which we perceive speech sounds. Speech therapists and audiologists also study [[Clinical Phonetics]], which looks at pathological instances of speech production and perception and studies how to correct deficiencies.
  
 
===Term properties===
 
===Term properties===

Latest revision as of 18:47, 2 June 2015

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Phonetics is the subfield of linguistics that is concerned with the articulatory, acoustic, and perceptual properties of speech sounds. It has corresponding subfields: Articulatory Phonetics, which explores how speech sounds are produced; Acoustic Phonetics, which looks at the acoustic properties of speech sounds; and Speech Perception, which examines the auditory system as well as the ways in which we perceive speech sounds. Speech therapists and audiologists also study Clinical Phonetics, which looks at pathological instances of speech production and perception and studies how to correct deficiencies.

Term properties

The corresponding relational adjective is phonetic.

Origin

Based on the Greek phonetikos, meaning vocal. The term phonetic was first attested in English in 1826, while the use of phonetics to mean the scientific study of speech appeared in 1841.

References