We know that the phonic medium can be studied from four points of
view: the articulatory, the acoustic, the auditory, and the
functional.
We may consider the branches of phonetics according to these
aspects. Articulatory phonetics is the study of the way the vocal
organs are used to produce speech sounds. Acoustic phonetics is the
study of the physical properties of speech sounds. Auditory
phonetics is the study of the way people perceive speech sounds. Of
these three branches of phonetics, the longest established, and
until recently the most highly developed, is articulatory
phonetics. For this reason, most of terms used by linguists to
refer to speech-sounds are articulatory in origin.
Phoneticians are also interested in the way in which sound
phenomena function in a particular language. In other words, they
study the abstract side of the sounds of language. The branch of
phonetics concerned with the study of the functional (linguistic)
aspect of speech sounds is called phonology. By contrast with
phonetics, which studies all possible sounds that the human vocal
apparatus can make, phonology studies only those contrasts in sound
which make differences of meaning within language.
Besides the four branches of phonetics described above, there are
other divisions of the science. We may speak of general phonetics
and the phonetics of a particular language (special or descriptive
phonetics). General phonetics studies all the sound-producing
possibilities of the human speech apparatus and the ways they are
used for purpose of communication. The phonetics of a particular
language studies the contemporary phonetic system of the particular
language, i.e. the system of its pronunciation, and gives a
description of all the phonetic units of the language. Descriptive
phonetics is based on general phonetics.
Linguists distinguish also historical phonetics whose aim is to
trace and establish the successive changes in the phonetic system
of a given language (or a language family) at different stages of
its development. Historical phonetics is a part of the history of
language.
Closely connected with historical phonetics is comparative
phonetics whose aims are to study the correlation between the
phonetic systems of two or more languages and find out the
correspondences between the speech sounds of kindred languages.
Phonetics can also be theoretical and practical. At the faculties
of Foreign Languages in this country, two courses are
introduced:
1. Practical, or normative, phonetics that studies the substance,
the material form of phonetic phenomena in relation to meaning.
2. Theoretical phonetics, which is mainly concerned with the
functioning of phonetic units in language.
This dichotomy is that which holds between theoretical and applied
linguists. Briefly, theoretical linguistics studies language with a
view to constructing theory of its structure and functions and
without regard to any practical applications that the investigation
of language might have. Applied linguistics has as its concerns the
application of the concepts and findings of linguistics to a
variety of practical tasks, including language teaching.
All the branches of phonetics are closely connected not only with
one another but also with other branches of linguistics. This
connection is determined by the fact that language is a system
whose components are inseparably connected with one another.
Phonetics is also connected with many other sciences. Acoustic
phonetics is connected with physics and mathematics. Articulatory
phonetics is connected with physiology, anatomy, and anthropology.
Historical phonetics is connected with general history of the
people whose language is studied; it is also connected with
archaeology. Phonology is connected with communication
(information) theory, mathematics, and statistics.
Branches of phonetics
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Для автора это очень важно, это стимулирует его на новое творчество!