1 / 48

Phonology

Phonology. Organization and interaction of sounds in a language sound system. Phonology. Up to this point we have studied the individual speech sounds of English Now we will learn some basic ways that the sounds of English interact systematically

nysa
Download Presentation

Phonology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Phonology Organization and interaction of sounds in a language sound system

  2. Phonology • Up to this point we have studied the individual speech sounds of English • Now we will learn some basic ways that the sounds of English interactsystematically • This will help us comprehend the concept of a sound system

  3. Phonology • Each language has its own sound system: the specific processes that occur as sounds interact during speech

  4. Phonemes • Compare the following words bit – pit tool – toll bag – bang What do we notice about each pair?

  5. *Minimal pairs Definition: Words that differ in one sound only • The fact of different meanings of the words proves that the sounds are recognized psychologically as ‘different sounds’ I.e., they are distinct from each other

  6. Minimal pairs • It is the existence of minimal pairs that demonstrates phonemes.

  7. *Phoneme defined • a sound that native speakers recognize as a distinct language sound and which makes a difference in meaning (the sound has a distinct value in the speech system)

  8. Phonemes • Thus, a phoneme is not the mere fact of a speech sound, but something recognized psychologically

  9. Phonology • In actual speech, pronunciation of speech sounds may vary from speaker to speaker, word to word, time to time • This variation is systematic and conventional

  10. *Variation in phonemes Six variants of phoneme /t/ • too [thu] aspirated

  11. Variants of /t/ • stew unaspirated (plain)

  12. Variants of /t/ • lot [latך] unreleased

  13. Variants of /t/ • butter flap /ſ/(see p. 46 for symbol)

  14. Variants of /t/ • button [‘bə?ən] glottal stop

  15. Variants of /t/ • hunter [hənər] t-sounddeleted

  16. Variants of /t/ • tea aspirated • stay unaspirated (plain) • potunreleased • better flap • batman glottal stop • winter deleted

  17. Variation in phonemes • These different pronunciations do not make a difference in meaning (i.e., they have the same value, /t/) • These different pronunciations are all recognized by native speakers as /t/ • The variation is conventional — the same among speakers in a community

  18. *Allophone • One of the different pronunciations of a speech sound that is still recognized as having the same value (value of the phoneme), and thus makes no differencein meaning I.e., all the above sound like /t/ to us • Each variant constitutes an allophone

  19. Phonemes • The concept of a phoneme is language specific

  20. Phonemes In English both • aspirated thtoo [thu] and • unaspirated t stew [stu] still are felt as /t/ (variants of English /t/) i.e., [t] and [th] are allophones of /t/)

  21. Phonemes But Chinese distinguishes aspirated and unaspirated sounds, 套 thao ‘set’ 道 tao ‘the religion’ /th/ and /t/ are distinct: They are different phonemes in Chinese

  22. Observations of variation • Observations like these result in *descriptive rules about a language • Here rule means dynamic principle

  23. *Derived rules The following rules can be derived for the allophones of English /t/ • At beginning of syllable, Voiceless stops are aspirated — too; pie; can [*Aspiration rule]

  24. Rules for allophones of English /t/ 2. *After /s/, Voiceless stops are plain — • spy, stay, ski

  25. Rules for allophones of English /t/ 3. *At the end of syllables and words, Voiceless stops are often unreleased in rapid speech — • bought; hit; what

  26. Rules for allophones of English /t/ • 4. *Beforenasal sounds /t/ may become glottal stop — button; waitin’; huntin’

  27. Rules for allophones of English /t/ • 5. (American Eng.) *Between vowels (after stressed syllable) Voiceless alveolar stops become voiced flaps — butter, better, water

  28. Rules for allophones of English /t/ • 6. *Aftera nasal sound, /t/, may be deleted — hunter [hənØr], winter [wInØr] (but also sandwich, grandma for some)

  29. Some allophones in Japanese • Japanese /t/ has the following allophones of /t/ in syllables: ta, te, to, tsu, chi Rules?

  30. Some allophones in Japanese • Before /a/, /e/, and /o/, /t/ is [th] • Before /u/, /t/ is [ts] • Before /i/, /t/ is [t∫] This allophonic variation occurs in all words

  31. *SYSTEMATIC VARIATION • These observations — SYSTEMATIC VARIATIONS — can be called Phonological processes or Phonological rules

  32. More phonological processes *Assimilation – Sometimes variation caused by influence of sounds that come after it in speech string— • San Bernardino – Sa[m]Bernardino- /n/ labialized by influence of following /b/; • tenth- /n/ dentalized by following interdental

  33. More Assimilation • Or on sounds that precede it: barn- /n/ retroflex twelfth_night- /n/ dentalized

  34. Assimilation • *Defined: The process of a sound changing in some way to be more like sounds that precede or follow it

  35. Assimilation in Korean • Korean /hap/ but [hamnida], — the /p/ is nasalized before /n/

  36. Phonological processes • *Palatalization: Because of the influence or a neighboring sound, the place of articulation shifts to the palate • Did you eat → • What are you doing → • “I need your vote” →

  37. Palatalization in Japanese • (Jp.) teyuuka ‘anyway’ → t∫uuka • ( Recall, in Japanese /t/ before /i/ → t∫)

  38. Phonological processes • *Devoicing please true cream • The aspiration of the voiceless stop causes devoicing of the following /r/ or /l/

  39. Phonological processes • *Stop insertion sen~se once hamster angst [voiceless stop] inserted between nasal sound and /s/ at same point of articulation

  40. Phonological processes *Metathesis inversion of consonants: • ask ~ aks • cavalry ~ calvary • comfortable ~ [kəmftərbl]

  41. Phonological processes • *Plural Voicing/Devoicing Beds – [-z] Watches – [-әz] Hats – [-s] English Rules?

  42. *Plural Devoicing • Rules – Beds – [-z] after voiced final sound Watches – [-әz] after sibilants Hats – [-s] all the rest, i.e., voiceless sounds

  43. Phonological processes • Each language has its own phonological processes

  44. Phonological processes • In English – shoes – [∫u-z] plural • Where in Spanish – los amigos – [-s]

  45. Phonological processes • Phonological processes are systematic They operate throughout the vocabulary and speech stream, according to principles (rules) which can be induced

  46. Phonological processes • The processes are conditioned by the features of sounds surrounding the sound in question E.g. • /t/ followed by /i/ → palatalization • /n/ followed by /b/ → labialization • Form of Pl (-s) agrees determined by last sound of word stem: shoes, judges, hats

  47. Phonology • *These examples of allophones, • the systematic variation they show and • the phonological processes (or rules) derived from them show that: • Speech sounds in a language interact systematically • Their interaction is based on observable principles

  48. Phonology This interaction is the subject of the study of phonology

More Related