Speech Sound

Class Notes for High School Students

1. What Is Speech Sound?

Speech sound is the sound produced by the human voice when people talk.

When we speak, our body creates sound by moving air from the lungs through the vocal cords and shaping that sound with the mouth, tongue, teeth, lips, and nose.

Speech sounds are used to form:

Speech sound is important because it allows humans to communicate ideas, emotions, questions, and information.

2. How Speech Sound Is Produced

Speech begins with air. The basic process is:

  1. Air moves out of the lungs.
  2. The air passes through the vocal cords in the larynx.
  3. The vocal cords may vibrate to create sound.
  4. The throat, mouth, tongue, lips, teeth, and nose shape the sound.
  5. The shaped sound becomes speech.
This process is called speech production.

3. Main Parts Used in Speech

Body Part Role in Speech
Lungs Push air upward to begin speech.
Diaphragm Helps control breathing and airflow.
Larynx Contains the vocal cords.
Vocal cords Vibrate to create voiced sounds.
Tongue Shapes many speech sounds.
Lips Help form sounds such as /p/, /b/, and /m/.
Teeth Help form sounds such as /f/, /v/, and /th/.
Nose Allows air to pass through for nasal sounds.
Mouth Main space where speech sounds are shaped.

4. Voiced and Voiceless Sounds

Speech sounds can be grouped into voiced and voiceless sounds.

Voiced Sounds

A voiced sound happens when the vocal cords vibrate.

Examples of voiced sounds include:

Voiceless Sounds

A voiceless sound happens when the vocal cords do not vibrate.

Examples of voiceless sounds include:

Try it:
Place your fingers gently on your throat and say:

5. Vowels

Vowels are speech sounds made when air flows freely through the mouth.

The letters usually associated with vowels are:

Sometimes Y acts like a vowel.

Examples of vowel sounds:

Vowels are important because they usually form the center of a syllable.

6. Consonants

Consonants are speech sounds made when airflow is partly or completely blocked.

The blockage can happen with the:

Examples:

7. Place of Articulation

The place of articulation is where in the mouth or throat a speech sound is made.

Place of Articulation Description Example Sounds
Bilabial Both lips come together. /p/, /b/, /m/
Labiodental Lower lip touches upper teeth. /f/, /v/
Dental Tongue touches or nears teeth. /th/
Alveolar Tongue touches ridge behind teeth. /t/, /d/, /s/, /z/, /n/
Velar Back of tongue touches soft palate. /k/, /g/
Glottal Sound made at the vocal cords. /h/

8. Manner of Articulation

The manner of articulation describes how airflow is controlled when making a sound.

Manner Description Example Sounds
Stop Air is completely blocked, then released. /p/, /b/, /t/, /d/, /k/, /g/
Fricative Air is forced through a narrow opening. /f/, /v/, /s/, /z/, /sh/
Nasal Air flows through the nose. /m/, /n/
Affricate Begins like a stop and ends like a fricative. /ch/, /j/
Liquid Smooth flowing sound. /l/, /r/
Glide Quick vowel-like sound. /w/, /y/

9. Phonemes

A phoneme is the smallest unit of sound that can change the meaning of a word.

Example:
The words bat and pat differ by only one sound: /b/ and /p/. Because the meaning changes, /b/ and /p/ are different phonemes in English.
Word Pair Changing Sound
cat / bat /c/ and /b/
sit / sat /i/ and /a/
fan / van /f/ and /v/
sip / zip /s/ and /z/

10. Syllables

A syllable is a beat or unit of sound in a word. Most syllables contain a vowel sound.

Word Number of Syllables
cat 1
tiger 2
computer 3
communication 5

Syllables help organize speech into smaller parts.

11. Pitch in Speech

Pitch is how high or low a voice sounds. Pitch depends on how fast the vocal cords vibrate.

People use pitch to show meaning and emotion.

12. Loudness in Speech

Loudness is how strong or quiet a speech sound is. Loudness depends on the amount of air pressure used when speaking.

Loudness can help show emotion, urgency, or emphasis.

13. Speech Rate

Speech rate is how fast or slow someone talks.

Good speakers often adjust their speech rate depending on the situation.

14. Stress and Emphasis

Stress means saying part of a word or sentence more strongly than the rest. Stress can change meaning.

Example Sentence:
“I didn’t say he stole the book.”

Depending on which word is stressed, the sentence can have different meanings:

Stress helps listeners understand what information is most important.

15. Intonation

Intonation is the rise and fall of pitch during speech. Intonation helps communicate meaning, mood, and sentence type.

Intonation Pattern Common Meaning
Rising pitch Question or uncertainty
Falling pitch Statement or command
Changing pitch Emotion or emphasis
Example:
“You’re coming.” sounds like a statement.
“You’re coming?” sounds like a question.

16. Speech Sound and Technology

Computers can record, analyze, and recognize speech sounds.

Speech technology is used in:

To process speech, computers analyze features such as:

17. Speech Recognition

Speech recognition is when a computer converts spoken words into text or commands.

Examples:

Speech recognition systems must handle challenges such as:

18. Speech Sound in Digital Form

When speech is recorded by a computer, it is converted into digital data.

The process usually includes:

  1. A microphone captures the speech sound.
  2. The sound becomes an electrical signal.
  3. The signal is sampled many times per second.
  4. Each sample is stored as a number.
  5. The numbers are saved in an audio file.

Digital speech can then be edited, stored, transmitted, or analyzed.

19. Spectrograms

A spectrogram is a visual representation of sound. It shows how frequencies change over time.

A spectrogram usually shows:

Speech scientists and computers use spectrograms to study speech patterns.

Spectrograms can help identify:

20. Why Speech Sound Matters

Understanding speech sound is useful in many fields.

Field Use of Speech Sound
Computer Science Speech recognition and AI assistants
Medicine Speech therapy and hearing tests
Education Reading, language learning, and communication
Music Singing and vocal performance
Forensics Voice analysis and speaker identification
Engineering Audio systems and noise reduction
Accessibility Captions, dictation, and assistive technology

21. Key Vocabulary

Term Meaning
Speech sound Sound made by the human voice to communicate.
Speech production Process of creating speech sounds.
Vocal cords Tissue in the larynx that vibrates to create voiced sounds.
Voiced sound Sound made with vocal cord vibration.
Voiceless sound Sound made without vocal cord vibration.
Vowel Speech sound made with open airflow.
Consonant Speech sound made with blocked or restricted airflow.
Place of articulation Where a sound is made in the mouth or throat.
Manner of articulation How airflow is controlled when making a sound.
Phoneme Smallest sound unit that can change word meaning.
Syllable Beat or unit of sound in a word.
Pitch How high or low a voice sounds.
Loudness How strong or quiet a sound is.
Speech rate Speed of speaking.
Stress Extra emphasis placed on a sound, syllable, or word.
Intonation Rise and fall of pitch in speech.
Spectrogram Visual display of sound frequencies over time.
Speech recognition Technology that converts spoken words into text or commands.

22. Main Ideas to Remember