Vowels include speech sounds where the airstream is frictionless and is basically modified by the position of the tongue and the lips. Vowels are very similar to glides and semivowels. The difference between vowels and glides and semivowels lies in the structure of the syllable. Vowels occur at the peak of the syllable--the most sonorous part of the syllable. Vowels are modified by lip position: rounded, neutral, spread. They are modified by tongue height: high, mid, low. And they are modified by tongue position: front, central, back. The following vowels represent a rather standard North American dialect. There many variations on the vowels in English dialects, especially in non-North American dialects. We are unable to cover these variants here. To hear a sample of each sound, click on the underscored item that ends in ".au". Some of these will be rerecorded soon.
Vowels are divided into tense vowels and lax vowels. In lax vowels the tongue root is positioned somewhat neutral in the mouth--neither forward (as in tense vowels) nor back (as before "r" and "l". The five basic lax vowels include:
In tense vowels the tongue root position is front. This causes what is sometimes described as tense oral muscles involving the production of these sounds. The high and mid peripheral vowels are realized as homorganic diphthongs. The five basic tense vowels include:
There are many variants of these sounds including tense and lax, crucial in English. Consult your textbook or any other textbook on phonetics for a detailed description and discussion of these variants.
There are three non-homorganic diphthongs in standard English.
There are two reduced vowels. They occur only in unstressed syllables.
Go to:
Go back to: