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  1. Articulatory phonology is a linguistic theory originally proposed in 1986 by Catherine Browman of Haskins Laboratories and Louis Goldstein of University of Southern California and Haskins.

  2. The field of articulatory phonetics is a subfield of phonetics that studies articulation and ways that humans produce speech. Articulatory phoneticians explain how humans produce speech sounds via the interaction of different physiological structures.

  3. English phonology is the system of speech sounds used in spoken English. Like many other languages, English has wide variation in pronunciation, both historically and from dialect to dialect.

  4. Phonetics has three main branches: articulatory phonetics, regarding the place of articulation and the movement of the lips, tongue, vocal tract, and vocal folds, acoustic phonetics, concerned with the traits of the sound waves and how the inner ear hears them, and.

  5. Articulatory phonetics refers to the “aspects of phonetics which looks at how the sounds of speech are made with the organs of the vocal tract” Ogden (2009:173). Articulatory phonetics can be seen as divided up into three areas to describe consonants. These are voice, place and manner respectively.

  6. An overview of the basic ideas of articulatory phonology is presented, along with selected examples of phonological pat­ terning for which the approach seems to provide a particularly insightful account.

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  8. Oct 28, 2011 · Articulatory phonetics is concerned with the physical apparatus used to produce speech sounds and the physical and cognitive factors that determine what are possible speech sounds and sound patterns.

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