- Scale of vowels
A scale of vowels is an arrangement of
vowel s in order of perceived "pitch".A scale used for
poetry inAmerican English lists the vowels by thefrequency of the secondformant (the higher of the twoovertone s that define a vowel sound). Starting with the lowest,In technical terms, this listing goes from
back vowel s tofront vowel s. It is by no means precise enough forphonology . For one thing, the sounds with ʊ or ɪ as the second symbol arediphthong s, during which the formants change. Also, many American accents and practically all from other countries will require different lists. Nonetheless this scale has been used in poetry. For instance, one can identify lines that generally go upward—:O love, be fed with apples while you may… (Robert Graves )or downward—:When lilacs last in the dooryard bloom'd… (
Walt Whitman )A
pendeka (from the Greek for "fifteen") is a poem containing each of the above vowels once. The following example, which goes up the scale, is intended strictly as a mnemonic.:Mood: no good, brought voice:Down, not up, perhaps:Ends with—Hi, baby!
Not to be confused with
The high- and low-frequency vowels described here are not the high vowels and low vowels of
linguistics . Those are vowels where the tongue is high (as in "cool" and "key") or low (as in "car") respectively. Also, this scale is not thesonority hierarchy .References
cite book | author = Nims, John Frederick, and David Mason | title = Western Wind: an Introduction to Poetry | publisher = McGraw-Hill | year = 2000 | id = ISBN 0-07-303180-1 For the pendeka, see the 1982 edition, ISBN 0-07-554405-9.
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