The Mouth Map

The schematic below shows a cross section of a human vocal tract, with its articulators:

  • Lips
  • Tongue: tip/blade
  • Tongue: body
  • Tongue: root
  • Velum (soft palate)
  • Vocal folds

…and their points of articulation:

  • Lips
  • Teeth
  • Alveolar ridge
  • Hard palate
  • Velum (soft palate)
  • Uvula
  • Pharynx (throat)
  • Glottis (space between the vocal folds)

Inside this vocal tract is a simplified phonetic chart, showing symbols that represent various types of speech sounds, from most obstructed to least:

  • Stops
  • Fricatives
  • Approximants
  • Vowels

Tongue-body positions for front and back vowels correspond to palatal and velar places of consonant articulation respectively.

Degree of Stricture

Speech sounds can be organized on a continuum of most obstructed to least obstructed: from full obstruction (stops); through partial obstruction (fricatives); through loose, brief, and relative obstruction (approximants); to unobstructed vowel sounds. Changing the degree of obstruction of a familiar articulation can help us conceptually navigate the oral space and produce unfamiliar speech sounds.

As an example, progressively tightening the stricture on a close front vowel /i/ moves that tongue shape through palatal approximant territory /j/ into a fricative sound /ʝ/ and eventually to a stop /ɟ/. Another example: Progressively loosening the stricture from the stop /ɡ/ will lead to fricative /ɣ/ and then approximant /ɰ/. Adding lip rounding to this shape will produce approximant /w/ or, when lengthened, vowel /u/.

For more on this concept, please see: https://ktspeechwork.org/geography-of-speech/ 

Practice

Vocal Tract Anatomy

Places of Articulation

In this Section