Evan Kirshenbaum’s feature set used in his ASCII transcription of the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA)[1], [2] describes the phonemes in a way consistent with how the phonemes are organised in the IPA code chart. That is the approach used in the Phonemes document to describe the phonemes in a phoneme definition file.
Those phoneme features often represent the action of more than one articulatory mechanism used to produce speech, or affect the same area. Internally, espeak-ng makes use of the articulatory model, not the IPA descriptions. This document describes how the feature-based IPA model is mapped to the articulatory model.
People working on adding new voices or languages do not need to read this document, but should instead read the Phonemes document. This is intended for people working on the espeak-ng codebase, or people interested in how espeak-ng works internally.
NOTE: This model is in the process of being implemented. As such, the current implementation does not reflect this document.
The manner of articulation is described in terms of several distinct feature types. The possible manners of articulation are:
Manner of Articulation | Feature | Phoneme Model |
---|---|---|
nasal | nas |
pmc egs nsl occ |
plosive (stop) | stp |
pmc egs orl occ |
affricate | afr |
pmc egs orl occ frr |
fricative | frc |
pmc egs orl frv |
tap/flap | flp |
pmc egs orl fla |
trill | trl |
pmc egs orl tri |
approximant | apr |
pmc egs orl app |
click | clk |
vlc igs orl |
ejective | ejc |
vlc igs orl occ |
implosive | imp |
gtc igs |
vowel | vwl |
pmc egs orl vow |
For imp
consonants, they use the features of the base phoneme except for
the pmc
and egs
features. Thus, a nas imp
is a gtc igs nsl occ
.
The vwl
phonemes are described using vowel height and backness features,
while consonants (the other manners of articulation) are described using
place of articulation features.
Additionally, the manner of articulation can be refined using the following features:
Feature | Name | Description |
---|---|---|
lat |
lateral | The air flow is directed along the sides of the tongue. |
sib |
sibilant | The air flow is directed through the teeth with the tongue. |
Feature | Name | Description |
---|---|---|
egs |
egressive | The air flow is moving outwards from the initiator to the target. |
igs |
ingressive | The air flow is moving inwards from the target to the initiator. |
Feature | Name | Description |
---|---|---|
pmc |
pulmonic | The diaphragm and lungs are used to generate the airstream. |
gtc |
glottalic | The glottis is used to generate the airstream. |
vlc |
velaric | The velum is closed and the tongue is used to generate the airstream. |
pcv |
percussive | There is no airstream used to produce this sound. |
Feature | Name | Description |
---|---|---|
nsl |
nasal | The air flows through the nose. |
orl |
oral | The air flows through the mouth. |
Feature | Name | Description |
---|---|---|
occ |
occlusive | The air flow is blocked within the vocal tract. |
frv |
fricative | The air flow is constricted, causing turbulence. |
fla |
flap | A single tap of the tongue against the secondary articulator. |
tri |
trill | A rapid vibration of the primary articulator against the secondary articulator. |
app |
approximant | The vocal tract is narrowed at the place of articulation without being turbulant. |
vow |
vowel | The phoneme is articulated as a vowel instead of a consonant. |
The place of articulation is described in terms of an active articulator and one or more passive articulators[9]. The possible places of articulation are:
Place of Articulation | Feature | Active | Lips | Teeth | Passive |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
bilabial | blb |
lbl |
ulp |
||
linguolabial | lgl |
lmn |
ulp |
||
labiodental | lbd |
lbl |
utt |
||
bilabial-labiodental | bld |
bld |
ulp |
utt |
|
interdental | idt |
lmn |
utt |
||
dental | dnt |
apc |
utt |
||
denti-alveolar | dta |
lmn |
utt |
alf |
|
alveolar | alv |
lmn |
alf |
||
apico-alveolar | apa |
apc |
alf |
||
palato-alveolar | pla |
lmn |
alb |
||
apical retroflex | arf |
sac |
alb |
||
retroflex | rfx |
apc |
hpl |
||
alveolo-palatal | alp |
dsl |
alb |
||
palatal | pal |
dsl |
hpl |
||
velar | vel |
dsl |
spl |
||
labio-velar | lbv |
dsl |
ulp |
spl |
|
uvular | uvl |
dsl |
uvu |
||
pharyngeal | phr |
rdl |
prx |
||
epiglotto-pharyngeal | epp |
lyx |
prx |
||
(ary-)epiglottal | epg |
lyx |
egs |
||
glottal | glt |
lyx |
gts |
Feature | Name | Articulator |
---|---|---|
lbl |
labial | lower lip |
lmn |
laminal | tongue blade |
apc |
apical | tongue tip |
sac |
subapical | underside of the tongue |
dsl |
dorsal | tongue body |
rdl |
radical | tongue root |
lyx |
laryngeal | larynx |
Feature | Articulator |
---|---|
ulp |
upper lip |
utt |
upper teeth |
alf |
alveolar ridge (front) |
alb |
alveolar ridge (back) |
hpl |
hard palate |
spl |
soft palate (velum) |
uvu |
uvular |
prx |
pharynx |
egs |
epiglottis |
gts |
glottis |
The phonation features describe the degree to which the glottis (vocal chords) are open or closed.
Feature | Name | Description |
---|---|---|
vls |
voiceless | The glottis is fully open, such that the vocal chords do not vibrate. |
brv |
breathy voice | The glottis is closed slightly, to produce a whispered or murmured sound. |
slv |
slack voice | The glottis is opened wider than mdv , but not enough to be brv . |
mdv |
modal voice | The glottis is opened to provide the optimal vibration of the vocal chords. |
stv |
stiff voice | The glottis is closed narrower than mdv , but not enough to be crv . |
crv |
creaky voice | The glottis is closed to produce a vocal or glottal fry. |
glc |
glottal closure | The glottis is fully closed. |
Voice | Feature | Phoneme Model |
---|---|---|
voiceless | vls |
vls |
voiced | vcd |
mdv |
Kirshenbaum, Evan, Representing IPA phonetics in ASCII (HTML). 1993.
Kirshenbaum, Evan, Representing IPA phonetics in ASCII (PDF). 2001.
International Phonetic Association, The International Phonetic Alphabet and the IPA Chart. 2015. Creative Commons Attribution-Sharealike 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY-SA).
Wikipedia. International Phonetic Alphabet. 2017. Creative Commons Attribution-Sharealike 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY-SA).
Dunn, R. H., Cainteoir Text-to-Speech Phoneme Features. 2013-2015.
Wikipedia. Voiced glottal fricative. 2017, Creative Commons Attribution-Sharealike 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY-SA).
Wikipedia. Extensions to the International Phonetic Alphabet. 2017, Creative Commons Attribution-Sharealike 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY-SA).
Wikipedia. Fortis and lenis. 2017, Creative Commons Attribution-Sharealike 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY-SA).
Wikipedia. Place of articulation. 2017, Creative Commons Attribution-Sharealike 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY-SA).