PHONOLOGY - Public.asu

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PHONOLOGY:
THE SOUND PATTERNS OF
LANGUAGE
See also “Phonetics,” “Spelling,” and
Writing Systems”
by Don L. F. Nilsen
and Alleen Pace Nilsen
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MINIMAL PAIRS
CONTRASTIVE DISTRIBUTION: Pronounce the following minimal
pairs: “bit,” “beat,” “bet,” “bat,” “bite,” “bought,” “but,” and
“bout”
In these words, the vowel sounds are in exactly the same phonetic
environment, preceded by a /b/ and followed by a /t/.
Since only the vowel is changing, then the changing of the vowel
must be making the difference in distinguishing these different
words.
(Fromkin Rodman Hyams [2011] 268)
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COMPLEMENTARY DISTRIBUTION
Now consider these minimal pairs in English: “then-den,” “latherladder,” and “breathe-breed.” In English /ð/ and /d/ are in
contrastive distribution.
(Fromkin Rodman Hyams [2011] 275-278)
But in Spanish, /ð/ and /d/ are in complementary distribution. /ð/
always occurs between vowels and /d/ never occurs between
vowels.
In the Spanish word “duda” for example, the first <d> is
pronounced /d/ and the second is pronounced /ð/.
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In Spanish, these two sounds never occur in
the same phonetic environment, never allow
there to be contrasting minimal pairs, and
never make a real difference.
In Spanish, therefore, the difference between /ð/
and /d/ is said to be “phonetic,” but not
“phonemic.”
Notice that in Spanish these two sounds are
spelled with the same letter of the alphabet,
<d>.
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NATURAL CLASSES OF SOUNDS:
NASALS
/m/ /n/ and /η/ are in a natural class called nasals.
Natural classes are important so that linguists can
make generalizations, like “In English, vowels
become nasal in the environment of nasal
consonants.
(Fromkin Rodman Hyams [2011] 282-284)
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ASPIRATION:
/p/ /t/ and /k/ form the natural class of voicless stops. In English,
voiceless stops are aspirated if they are followed by a stressed
vowel and not preceded by /s/.
This makes sense because aspiration is a puff of air. This puff would
occur after a stop. It would occur into a stressed syllable. If the
consonant were voiced or if some of the air had leaked out
because of a preceding /s/, the aspiration would be less
pronounced.
(Fromkin Rodman Hyams [2011] 239-240, 281)
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VOICING
When Verbs add -ed to become past tense this ending becomes voiced if
the preceding sound is voiced as in “planned” or voiceless if the
preceding sound is voiceless as in “jumped.”
Since /t/ is not voiced and vowels are voiced, a /t/ between vowels often
becomes voiced so that “latter” and “writer” are pronounced like
“ladder” and “rider.”
(Fromkin Rodman Hyams [2011] 238-241)
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PALATALIZATION
When a word that ends with a /t/ is followed by
a –ual, -ial, or -ion ending, the palatal vowel
<y-> changes the /t/ sound into a /č/ sound.
addict  addiction
act  actual or action
part  partial
predict  prediction
(Fromkin Rodman Hyams [2011] 236-238)
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STOPS BECOMES CONTINUANTS
Because /k/ is a stop, and vowels are continuants, an affix
beginning with a vowel often changes /k/ to /s/.
critic  criticize or criticism
fanatic  fanaticism
romantic  romanticism
This ability of the <c> to have two different pronunciations allows
us to spell these words the same way even though they are
pronounced diffently. The benefit of this is that it helps us to
see that these words are in the same word-family even though
the <c> part is pronounced differently.
(Fromkin Rodman Hyams [2011] 284-288)
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CONSONANT ASSIMILATIONFOR EASE AND SPEED
VERB 3rd sing pres ind: sings, hits
VERB past: buzzed, jumped
VERB past part: popped, killed
NOUN plurals: cats, dogs
NOUN possessives: Mike's, Fred's
ADJ substantive: its, ours
PREFIX: (NOTE: im- assimilates as follows): illegal, immature, impotent,
indelicate, irreligious
(Fromkin Rodman Hyams [2011] 284-288)
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CONSONANT DISSIMILATION:
FOR CLARITY
VERB 3rd person singular present inddicative: buzzes
VERB past tense: heated
VERB past participle: spotted
NOUN plural: horses
NOUN possessive: Max’s
NOUN: belfry
ADJ: ignoble
(Fromkin Rodman Hyams [2011] 288-289)
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MORE CONSONANT
ASSIMILATIONS
MODAL PLUS "HAVE" ASSIMILATION: coulda, mighta,
shoulda, woulda
MODAL PLUS "TO" ASSIMILATION: gonna, hafta, hasta,
supposta, useta
CONTRACTIONS: *ain’t, can’t, couldn’t, won’t, wouldn’t,
shan’t, shouldn’t, *mayn’t, (mightn’t, mustn’t)
(Fromkin Rodman Hyams [2011] 284-288)
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DISSIMILATION AGAIN
“-al” is a suffix that changes a Noun into an Adjective,
but when the Noun ends in /l/, dissimilation occurs:
“anecdotal”
“penal”
“spiritual”
“venal”
but “angular”
but “perpendicular”
but “similar”
but “velar”
(Fromkin Rodman Hyams [2011] 288-289)
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VOWEL REDUCTION AND
ASSIMILATION
BRITISH VOWEL REDUCTION: aluminum, laboratory,
secretary
LONG AND SHORT GRADES: do-done, go-gone,
nation-national, obscene-obscenity, punitive-punish,
sign-signature, soup-supper
(Fromkin Rodman Hyams [2011] 257)
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vowel reduction and word stress
When a suffix changes a word from one Part of Speech
to another, this suffix affects which syllables are
stressed, and which are unstressed and can change
to different vowel grades like schwa or short grade:
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analysis-analytic
phone-phonetic
compete-competition
solid-solidity
maintain-maintenance
Talmud-Talmudic
medicine-medicinal
telegraph-telegraphy
(Fromkin Rodman Hyams [2011] 297-298,
337-338)
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HISTORIC PHONOLOGY
REFLECTED IN SPELLINGS
TRACES: ic-ich-I, knight, hostel-hôtel- hotel, scribereécrire-scribe
DOUBLETS: chief-chef, dish-discus, hotel-hostel, shipskiff, shirt-skirt
GRIMM'S LAW: courage-hearty, corn-horn, decade-ten,
dozen-twelve, dent-tooth, pedestal-footnote, padrefather, plate-flat, pyre-fire
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!MORE HISTORIC PHONOLOGY
REFLECTED IN SPELLINGS
GERMANIC UMLAUT: child, goose, man, mouse,
woman (cf. book-beech)
GREEK RHOTOCISM: genus-generic; opus-opera
ENGLISH: schwa and silent e
ACRONYMS AS WORDS: AID, AIDS, BIRP,
CREEP, GASP, MANURE, MASH, NOW, NUT,
SAG, VISTA, ZIP
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!!FOREIGN INFLUENCES ON
PHONOLOGY & SPELLING
BORROWINGS: chaise longue, cole slaw, frankfurter,
hamburger, lingerie, rouge, schnitzel, wiener
BILINGUAL COGNATES: actual, embarazada, grocería,
libraria, molestar, principio, (cf. blanket [white], porpoise
[pig fish], puny [puis né], walrus [whale horse])
INDO-EUROPEAN ABLAUT: sing-sang-song
MODAL PAST-SUBJUNCTIVE: can-could, may-might,
shall-should, will-would
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!!!FINAL THOUGHTS FROM OGDEN NASH
The one-l lama,
He’s a priest.
The two-l llama,
He’s a beast.
And I will bet
A silk pajama
There isn’t any Three-l lllama.
(Fromkin Rodman Hyams [2007] 290)
In response to this poem one wit remarked, “A threealarmer (three-l lllama) is a really big fire.”
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References:
Clark, Virginia P., Paul A. Eschholz, and Alfred F. Rosa, ed. Language:
Readings in Language and Culture, Sixth Edition. Boston, MA:
Bedford, St. Martins, 1998.
Eschholz, Paul, Alfred Rosa, and Virginia Clark. Language Awareness.
Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2009.
Fromkin, Victoria, Robert Rodman, and Nina Hyams. “Phonology: The
Sound Patterns of Language.” An Introduction to Language, 9th
Edition. Boston, MA: Thomson Wadsworth, 2011, 266-323.
Have, Paul ten. Doing Conversation Analysis: A Practical Guide. London,
England: Sage Publications, 2007.
Nilsen, Alleen Pace, and Don L. F. Nilsen. Encyclopedia of 20th Century
American Humor. Westport, CT: Greenwood, 2000.
Nilsen, Don L. F., and Alleen Pace Nilsen. Pronunciation Contrasts in
English, 2nd Edition. Long Grove, IL: Waveland Press in 2010.
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