Thursday 18 November 2010

distinguish bad manners from bed manners

No - this blog entry is not about bad bediquette such as hogging double duvets in a double bed. Bad bed manners can be a threat to an otherwise happy marriage, as the Daily Mail reported in March 2010. As I'm not a trained marriage counsellor I shall refrain from commenting on such marital problems.
This entry, however, is about the vowels in bad and bed, had or head and similar words.The distinction between /e/ and /æ/ is notoriously difficult for German students of English to produce although it's rather easy to discriminate.
I carried out a tiny experiment with 38 German students of English, who attended my phonetics classes in 2010, an experiment, in which I made them listen to eight minimal pair sentences of the type:
I hope you will land/lend me a fish.
They heard one member of such a pair of sentences only, but saw both on a piece of paper. They were supposed to tick the one they believed to have heard.
Here are the sentences (the colour green marks the one they heard):
  1. You can't say dad/dead on a gravestone
  2. Charles confesses: I love Alan/Ellen
  3. Will the man/men come?
  4. This pan/pen leaks
  5. They bought a lot of jams/gems from the specialty shop
  6. He was sanding/sending some furniture when I called
  7. I like Barry's/berries best
  8. I hope you will land/lend me a fish
And these are the results in per cent:
  1. 71/29
  2. 16/84
  3. 21/79
  4. 05/95
  5. 78/22
  6. 82/18
  7. 92/08
  8. 87/13
BTW: It's a real eye-opener - sorry, ear-opener - to many a German student if such minimal pair sentences are used in an exercise: Student A reads out one of the two sentences and student B provides the appropriate answer. Here's an example:

student A OOstudent B
(a)Will the men come?OO I haven't invited them
(b)Will the man come?OO He's on his way here
So much for the auditory side of these two vowels. Articulatory aspects will be dealt with in a future blog entry.

PS: The sentences were taken from H. Eckert & W. Barry (2005) and  J.D. Bowen (1975). I'm always on the lookout for more minimal pair sentences. I'd be most grateful if you would post some more here.

5 comments:

  1. (1) We had Brad/bread for lunch.
    (2) It's easy to get fet/fatter (no minimal pair in general American).

    ReplyDelete
  2. I can't find the cattle/kettle.
    The letter/latter might arrive tomorrow.

    ReplyDelete
  3. #2 must read:
    (2) It's easy to get feta/fatter

    ReplyDelete
  4. In response to your appeal for more examples of epsilon/ash contrasts may I draw your and your readers’ attention to my Phonetiblog #004 (at www.yek.me.uk) on The Bleck Hendbeg Problem (or ‘Syndrome’ if you prefer).

    ReplyDelete
  5. @JWL: belly-dancer versus ballet-dancer is a minimal pair my students will appreciate

    ReplyDelete