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The Sound Patterns of Language

The document discusses the differences between phonetics and phonology, explaining that phonetics deals with the physical properties of sounds while phonology examines how sounds are organized into systems within languages. It also defines key concepts in phonology including phonemes, which are the smallest units of sound that distinguish meaning, and allophones, which are contextual variants of phonemes. The document provides examples to illustrate these phonological concepts and their application in analyzing the sound system of English.

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Monsef Jraid
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
61 views

The Sound Patterns of Language

The document discusses the differences between phonetics and phonology, explaining that phonetics deals with the physical properties of sounds while phonology examines how sounds are organized into systems within languages. It also defines key concepts in phonology including phonemes, which are the smallest units of sound that distinguish meaning, and allophones, which are contextual variants of phonemes. The document provides examples to illustrate these phonological concepts and their application in analyzing the sound system of English.

Uploaded by

Monsef Jraid
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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The sound patterns of

language

Phonology
Chapter 5

Alaa Mohammadi- Fall 2009 1

This lecture
 There are systematic differences between:
 What speakers memorize about the sounds of
words.
 The speech sounds that speakers produce when
they utter.
 What speakers store in memory about the
sounds of language, and how they translate
these patterns into speech sounds..
Phonology

1
Phonetics & Phonology
 Phonetics -- What are the sounds? How
are they made in the vocal tract?
 [t] voiceless alveolar stop
 [p] voiceless bilabial stop
 Phonology -- How do sounds combine?
How do they affect each other?
 What happens to [t] when it occurs initially
or between vowels?
3

What is the difference between


Phonetics and Phonology?
 Phonetics deals with the physical properties
of speech sounds, e.g. how the sound is
physically produced.

 Phonology deals with the sound systems


languages
 How sounds are organized into systems in
different languages
 How sounds are combined
 The relation between them and how they affect
each other.
4

2
Definition of Phonology
 The description of the systems and patterns
of speech sounds in a language.

 Concerned with abstract or mental aspects of


speech sounds.

 Key concepts : Phonemes and Allophones

 How /t/ in ‘tuck’, ‘stuck’, ‘cut’ is different.

Phonology
 What knowledge do we possess about the
phonological rules in our language?
 Know which sound sequences might be a
word in our language
thrim/blamp vs. gdit/rpuk
mipped vs. ritp
 Pronounce words we never heard before
 Change foreign words to pattern like the
words in our language
 Apply rules to words we never heard before
6

3
The Phoneme
 Transcribe the following words
 Tip dip lip zip
 The smallest speech sound that distinguishes
meaning. It serves to create meaning
differences, e.g. /t/ is different than /d/.
 An abstract term, specific to a particular
language.
 Forms the structure of sound system in a
language.
7

Phonemes
 An essential property of a phoneme is that it
functions contrastively.

 In English, 2 phonemes /f/ &/v/


 Contrast:
 fat ≠ vat
 fine ≠ vine

Rule: If we substitute one sound for another in a


word and there is a change in meaning, then the two
sounds represent different phonemes.
8

4
Phonemes
 Consonant chart lists phonemes in
English
 The terms that are used in creating the
chart are called ‘features’ which are
marked by sign + & -
 E.g [b] + voice + bilabial +stop
[s] – voice + alveolar + fricative

Phonemes
 /p/ [- voice, + bilabial, + stop]
/k/ [- voice, + velar, + stop]
/t/ [ - voice, + alveolar, + stop]
 Natural class?
 Sounds that have features in common
behave phonologically in similar ways.
 /v/ [+ voice, + labiodentals, +
fricative]– not the same natural class.
10

5
Allophones
 Transcribe the following words
 Top stop writer kitten eighth hunter
 The [t] is different in each word.
 [t] in ‘top’ is aspirated and non-aspirated in
‘stop’
 American English [t] a flap in ‘writer’
 [t] in ‘kitten’ is a glottal stop
 [t] in ‘eighth’ is dentalized
 American English– there is no [t] in ‘hunter’
11

Allophones of /t/
Allophones of [t]

Flap Glottal stop Dental


Aspirated
Between vowels A vowel and When followed by a
Initially
Writer - butter syllabic consonant Dental
Top - time
Kitten – batman eighth

Phone 1 Phone 2 Phone 3 Phone 4

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6
Phonemes vs. Phones
In the mind In the mouth

The phoneme is the In actual speech,


abstract unit (sound many different versions
type) of /t/
e.g. /t/ e.g. tar, star, writer,
eighth
each version = phone

13

The allophone
 Each phoneme may have different realisations
depending on the context in which it is found.
 /s/ in seen and soon.
 ‘seen’ is produced with spread lips, as /i/ follows.
 ‘soon’ is realised with rounded lips, to prepare for the
following rounded vowel, /u/.
 This second, rounded /s/ is a variation, or allophone
of the phoneme.
 /p/ in pal and pull
 /k/ in kill and cool
 Allophones are what we actually produce and
hear. 14

7
Phonemes and allophones
These differences are usually expressed using phonological
rules.

15

The difference between a


phoneme and an allophone
 If one allophone is exchanged with another,
e.g. if seen is produced with lip rounding, the
meaning does not change but it sounds
strange.

 If one phoneme is swapped with another,


e.g. seen is produced with a /b/, instead of a
/s/, the meaning of the word changes-
Phonemes function contrastively

16

8
One more example!
 /i/ seen & seed
 seen = nasalization = ~
 seed = normal [i]
 2 phones for one phoneme /i/
 Both are allophones of /i/

 In English, the nasalized version is not


meaningfully contrastive.
 In French, it is.

17

Finding Phonemes
 Minimal pairs of words
 A pair of words that have different
meanings and which differ in only one
sound.
 Here is an example from English:
Sip [sp]
Zip [zp]
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9
Minimal sets
 When a group of words can be differentiated,
each one from the other, by changing one
phoneme (in the same position in the word),
we can have a minimal set.
e.g.
 feat/ fit/ fat/ fate/ fought/ foot (vowel phonemes)
 big/ pig/ rig/ fig/ dig/ wig (consonant phonemes)

19

Minimal pairs
 Four golden rules for minimal
pairs:
• Have the same number of sounds
• Identical in every sound except for one
• The sound that is different must be in
the same position in each word
• The words must have different
meanings
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10
Phonotactics
 big/ pig/ rig/ fig/ dig/ wig
 The above minimal set doesn’t include (lig/
vig)
 They are not English words
 But they could be!
 Our phonological knowledge of the pattern
of sounds in English would allow us to
consider them acceptable.
 In the future! (I think Joe is one very
ignorant guy. ~ Yeah, he’s a big vig)
21

Phonotactics
 [fsIg] / [rnIg]
 Do not and will never exist.
 Formed without obeying some constraints on the
sequence or position of English phonemes.
 Such constraints on the sequence or position of
phonemes / rules = Phonotactics

Phonotactics: the permitted arrangements of


sounds in a language.

22

11
Syllables
 A syllable: a phonological unit that contains more
than one phoneme
 A syllable must contain a vowel or a vowel like sound

(e.g. [w], [j]).


 The basic elements of the syllable are: Onset +
Rhyme
Onset = one or more consonants syllable

Rhyme = Nucleus + Coda


onset rhyme
Nucleus = a vowel
Coda = one or more consonants nucleus coda

Consonant(s vowel Consonant(s


23
) )

Open vs. Closed Syllables


 Open syllables = an onset + a nucleus (but no
coda)
e.g. me, to, no
 Closed syllables= the coda is present
e.g. up, at, syllable

cup, hat, Sam, dip


onset rhyme

nucleus coda

Consonant( vowel Consonant(


24
s) s)

12
Consonant cluster
 Both the onset & the coda can consist
of more than one consonant.
 e.g. /st/ = consonant cluster (CC)
 /st/ = CC = a onset in stop
 /st/ = CC = a coda in post

25

Consonant cluster
 There are many CC onset combinations
permitted in English phonotactics:
e.g. black, flat, bread, trick, throw, twin
Note: liquids (/l/, /r/) & a glide (/w/) are in
2nd position

26

13
Consonant cluster
 English can have larger onset
clusters
e.g. stress, splat (3 initial
consonants = CCC)
 the phonotactics here are not
difficult to describe!
1. 1st consonant = /s/
2. -V stop = (/p/, /t/, /k/)
27
3. One of these liquids or glides = (/l/,

Co-articulation effects
 Our talk is often fast and spontaneous
 Our articulators move from one sound to
another without stopping.

Co-articulation: The process of making one


sound almost at the same time as the next
sound

 There are two well-know co-articulation


effects: assimilation & elision 28

14
Assimilation
Assimilation is a common phonological process by
which the phonetics of a speech segment (a sound)
becomes more like that of an adjacent sound.

 articulation = easier, quicker


e.g.
Phonological rule: “Any vowel becomes nasal
whenever it immediately precedes a nasal.”
- lap [læp] vs. fan [fæn]

29

Assimilation
Another example:
 can [kæn]

 I can go

 Because of the velar stop [g] in go, the alveolar nasal [n] in
can will be the velar nasal [ŋ]
 [ajkəŋgo]

 Notice: æ became ə
 and [ænd]
 you and me [yuənmi]

30

15
Elision
 you and me [yuənmi]
 Where is the [d]?
 The stop [d] between two nasals [n] & [m]
 Friendship [frnʃIp]

Elision: The process of not pronouncing a sound


segment that might be present in the deliberately
careful pronunciation of a word in isolation

 More examples: p. 49

31

Normal speech
 Constantly avoiding the regular patterns
of assimilation & elision would result in
extremely artificial-sounding talk.

32

16
Key terms
 Phonology
 Phonemes & allophones
 Minimal pairs and sets
 Phonotactics
 Syllables
 Co-articulation effects

33

See you next class ☺


Please read chapter 6

34

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