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Roundedness

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Vowels
See also: IPA, Consonants
  Front Near- front Central Near- back Back
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i · y
ɨ · ʉ
ɯ · u
ɪ · ʏ
e · ø
ɘ · ɵ
ɤ · o
ɛ · œ
ɜ · ɞ
ʌ · ɔ
a · ɶ
ɑ · ɒ
  Near-close
Close-mid
Mid
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Where symbols appear in pairs, the one to the right represents
a rounded vowel. Vowel length is indicated by appending ː.

In phonetics, vowel roundedness refers to the amount of rounding in the lips during the articulation of a vowel. That is, it is vocalic labialization. When pronouncing a rounded vowel, the lips form a circular opening, while unrounded vowels (also called spread vowels) are pronounced with the lips relaxed. In most languages, front vowels tend to be unrounded, while back vowels tend to be rounded. But some languages, such as French and German, distinguish rounded and unrounded front vowels of the same height, while Vietnamese distinguishes rounded and unrounded back vowels of the same height.

When consonants are rounded, they are called labialized.

In the International Phonetic Alphabet vowel chart, rounded vowels are the ones that occur on the right in each pair of vowels. There are also diacritics, respectively ɔ̹ ɔ̜, to indicate greater or lesser degrees of rounding. The 'more' and 'less rounded' diacritics are sometimes also used with consonants to indicate degrees of labialization. (See relative articulation.)

[edit] Types of rounding

Lack of rounding, endolabial rounding and exolabial rounding, as portrayed by a speaker of Swedish.

There are two types of vowel rounding: endolabial,[1] typical of back rounded vowels such as [u] and [o], where the lips are projected forward and the channel between them is formed by their inner surfaces; and exolabial,[2] typical of front rounded vowels such as [y] and [ø], where the lips are vertically compressed and the channel is formed by their outer surfaces.[3]

In exolabial rounding, the corners of the mouth are drawn slightly together and the lips may be compressed horizontally, but the lips do not protrude and only their outer surface is exposed. In endolabial rounding, the lips protrude like a tube, as when kissing; the inner surface of the lips is exposed. Usually, back rounded vowels are endolabial, while front rounded vowels are exolabial. However, in Japanese, the back high vowel is exolabial. Standard Swedish is unusual in that it makes a phonemic distinction between the two types, having unrounded, endolabial, and exolabial front close-mid vowels. Some varieties of Dutch make the same distinction. There is no IPA diacritic to represent this contrast, and without clarification both the word "rounded" and the symbols for the rounded vowels are ambiguous.[4]

The northern Iroquoian languages have no labial consonants. They do have /w/, /ɡʷ/, and /kʷ/, but these do not involve noticeable rounding (protrusion) of the lips. It may be that they are compressed.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Endolabial: also called protruded, lip-pouting, horizontal lip-rounding, outrounding, and inner rouding (Robert Lawrence Trask, A dictionary of phonetics and phonology, 1996:180)
  2. ^ Exolabial: also called compressed, pursed, vertical lip-rounding, inrounding, or outer rounding (Robert Lawrence Trask, A dictionary of phonetics and phonology, 1996:252)
  3. ^ Henry Sweet noted in 1890 that "the term 'inner rounding' derives from the use of the inner surfaces of the lips; the synonymous 'outrounding' derives from the forward projection of the lips. Both terms are justifiable, but their coexistence is likely to lead to serious confusion." (Cited in Trask 1996:180.) The terms endolabial and exolabial are due to Catford. See also Martin John Ball & Fiona E. Gibbon, Vowel Disorders, 2002:51; Ladefoged, Peter; Ian Maddieson (1996). The Sounds of the World's Languages. Oxford: Blackwell. p. 295. ISBN 0-631-19814-8. 
  4. ^ When the IPA does not have a symbol for a phone or feature, the convention is to use the asterisk, thus [u*] for Japanese exolabial /u/, or [ʏ*] for Swedish endolabial /y/. However, this does not appear to have been used in the literature on rounding.

[edit] See also

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