LING2010 Phonetics: Sounds of the World's Languages - Later Year
Later Year Course
| Offered By | School of Language Studies |
|---|---|
| Academic Career | Undergraduate |
| Course Subject | Linguistics |
| Offered in | Second Semester, 2011 and Second Semester, 2012 |
| Unit Value | 6 units |
| Course Description |
Speech is the most important medium through which we convey our ideas, emotions and identity. To an untrained ear, languages can often sound very different from each other: Vietnamese from English, for example, or Arabic from Zulu. But the speech sounds of the world's languages do not vary without limit and are in fact built up according to fairly simple structural principles. Speech sounds are studied in the discipline of Phonetics. This course is both a theoretical and practical course in Phonetics. It teaches you about human speech sounds: how they are made by the human vocal tract; how they are transmitted acoustically; and how the speech acoustics are perceived. The course also has a strong practical focus: to show how one discovers the sounds of an unknown language from scratch. In order to do this, students learn how to produce and transcribe a large number of the speech sounds of the world's languages, including all the exotica of clicks, ejectives, implosives, tones and much more. You will also learn how to quantify some important speech acoustics with a computer. Finally, one very important applied aspect of phonetics is explained - Forensic Speaker Identification - together with the proper way of evaluating forensic evidence. A course website is used which includes unique materials designed by the lecturer to develop students' transcriptional and analytical skills. The lecturer is an acknowledged expert on the phonetics of Tone Languages, and also one of the world's leading forensic speech scientists. |
| Learning Outcomes |
|
| Indicative Assessment |
3 Transcription assignments (10% each), transcription test (20%), fieldwork transcription (12%), acoustic analysis (8%), major fieldwork project (30%). |
| Workload |
2 hours of lectures and 1 hour of tutorial per week |
| Areas of Interest | Linguistics and Applied Linguistics |
| Requisite Statement |
None, but students are advised to take Introduction to the Study of Language LING1001/2001 first. |
| Incompatibility |
LING1004/LING2004 Phonetics and Phonology and LING1010 Phonetics: Sounds of the World's Languages. |
| Prescribed Texts |
P. Ladefoged. A Course in Phonetics (Textbook & CD). Thomson [5th edition] 2006 |
| Preliminary Reading |
The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Language, Chapters 22-30 |
| Majors/Specialisations | Japanese Linguistics, Applied Linguistics, and Linguistics |
| Other Information |
This course or its predecessor LING1004/LING2004 is required for Honours in Linguistics. |
| Academic Contact | to be advised |
The information published on the Study at ANU 2011 website applies to the 2011 academic year only. All information provided on this website replaces the information contained in the Study at ANU 2010 website.




