Phonology is the study of sound patterns in language. It examines how speech sounds are organized and interact within and across words. Phonology analyzes phonological processes such as assimilation, deletion, and stress assignment. It also considers phonological units like phonemes, allophones, and phonotactic constraints. Phonological knowledge allows speakers to produce and understand the sounds of their language.
Phonology is the study of how sounds are organized and used in languages. It involves identifying the phonemes, or smallest units of sound, that make up words, and describing how combinations of phonemes are used to create meaning. Phonology also examines phonological processes like allophones, which are variations in pronunciation of the same phoneme, and rules that govern how phonemes are combined into syllables and words with correct stress patterns. The international phonetic alphabet is used to represent sounds in a standardized way across languages.
This document discusses syllables in phonology. It defines a syllable as a unit of spoken language consisting of a single uninterrupted sound. Syllables help segment speech into rhythmic strong and weak beats to make it easier for the brain to process. A word contains at least one syllable. The document then explains the parts of a syllable including onset, rhyme, nucleus, and coda. It provides examples of syllable structures and discusses syllable types such as open, closed, and those containing consonant clusters. Finally, it touches on syllabic consonants and stress patterns within words.
The document discusses various theories and concepts related to syllables, including:
1) Syllable structure consists of an onset, nucleus and coda. The nucleus is usually a vowel.
2) Sonority theory proposes that syllables correspond to peaks in airflow, with more sonorous segments like vowels forming syllable nuclei.
3) Prominence theory defines syllables as speech units with peaks of prominence from factors like stress, duration and pitch.
4) Chest pulse theory associates syllables with increases in air pressure during speech.
Phonemes are the basic sound units of a language. Each phoneme comprises a set of allophones, which are the phonetic variants of that phoneme. Allophones are predictable realizations of a phoneme that depend on the linguistic environment, whereas phonemes are non-predictable and significant for meaning. Different languages can organize the same sounds differently - for example, English has aspirated and unaspirated /p/ phonemes, while Mandarin treats these as different phonemes. The distribution and organization of phonemes versus their allophonic variants distinguishes languages.
This document provides an overview of phonology, discussing its key concepts and units of analysis. It defines phonology as the study of sound patterns in language and identifies its three major units as segments, syllables, and features. It examines topics such as minimal pairs, contrastive sounds, allophones, and phonotactics. It also discusses language-specific variations and how sounds that contrast in one language may not in another. Overall, the document provides a concise introduction to fundamental concepts in phonological analysis.
The document discusses several theories of semantics, including truth-conditional semantics, generative semantics, and semantic competence. Truth-conditional semantics claims that the meaning of a sentence is identical to the conditions under which it is true. Generative semantics aims to give rules to predict which word combinations form grammatical sentences. Semantic competence refers to a native speaker's ability to recognize utterances as meaningless even if grammatically correct.
The phoneme can be defined as "the smallest contrastive linguistic unit which may bring about a change of meaning" (Gimson, A.C. (2008), Cruttenden, A., ed., The Pronunciation of English (7 ed.)). This definition can be clarified by a practice called minimal pair which is listing pairs of words which are different in meaning and phonologically distinct only in one phonological element.
Minimal pair can be illustrated in the following examples:
The words "pin" /p肘n/ and "pan" /p脱n/ are different only in their middle sounds i.e. /肘/ & /脱/. Therefore the sounds /肘/ & /脱/ are considered to be different phonemes.
The words "pill" /p肘l/ and "bill" /b肘l/ are different only in their initial sounds i.e. /p/ & /b/. Therefore the sounds /p/ & /b/ are considered to be different phonemes.
An allophone, on the other hand, is one of a set of multiple possible spoken sounds (or phones) used to pronounce a single phoneme. It can be considered to be variations of a phoneme and doesn't change the meaning of a word.
e.g. the phoneme /p/ in the word "pill" /p肘l/ can be aspirated [p憤肘l ]. So the aspirated [p憤] is considered to be the allophone of the phoneme /p/
This document summarizes key aspects of phonetics, which is the study of speech sounds. It discusses phonology, the production and transmission of speech sounds, and the principal cavities and organs involved in speech. It also defines consonants and vowels, and describes the place and manner of articulation for different consonant sounds. Key terms covered include bilabial, alveolar, voiced, voiceless, stops, fricatives, nasals, laterals, and approximants. The document also briefly mentions vowels, diphthongs, triphthongs, and suprasegmentals like stress, pitch, and intonation.
AntConc is a freeware corpus analysis toolkit designed for use in technical writing classrooms. It includes tools like a concordancer, word frequency generator, cluster analysis, and more. It has an intuitive interface and works on Windows, Linux, and Unix systems. Future updates will improve speed, add new features like viewing collocates, and better support annotated data.
This presentation covers major points about the Categorizing English world. It consists of other sub-points World Englishes, Braj Kachru, Several classifications schemes have been proposed, ENL, EFL, ESL, Developmental stages of English language, Exonormative
presentation of phone phoneme and allophones copy.pptTeacher
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This document defines and distinguishes between phones, phonemes, and allophones. Phones are the smallest units of sound in speech. Phonemes are the minimal distinctive units of sound that distinguish meaning. They are abstract categories that contain various phones. Allophones are variants of phonemes that do not change a word's meaning and occur in complementary distribution based on phonetic environment. The document provides examples of phones, phonemes, and allophones in English to illustrate the differences between these phonetic and phonological units.
This document discusses the key differences between phonetics and phonology. Phonetics deals with the physical properties of speech sounds, while phonology examines how sounds are organized into systems within languages. It defines phonology as the description of sound patterns in a language, focusing on abstract mental representations rather than physical sounds. The document introduces important phonological concepts like phonemes, allophones, minimal pairs, phonotactics, syllables, and co-articulation effects like assimilation and elision.
Word vs lexeme by james jamie 2014 presentation assigned by asifa memon lect...James Jamie
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The document discusses words and lexemes. It defines a word as the smallest meaningful unit in a language that can be used independently, representing a thought or psychological unit. A lexeme is the smallest semantic unit, which can be formed from root words through the addition of prefixes, suffixes, and affixes. While a word remains a word even if its class or form is changed, it will then represent a separate lexeme. Examples are provided to illustrate this distinction between words and lexemes.
The document discusses various phonological processes that occur in the English language. It defines phonological processes as the natural changes that occur in language sounds over time. Some key phonological processes discussed include linking, where sounds are connected between words; elision, where sounds are omitted to aid pronunciation; assimilation, where speech sounds take on attributes of surrounding sounds; coalescence, where two sounds merge into one; haplology, where similar syllables are reduced; and gemination, where consonants are prolonged. Examples are provided for each process to illustrate how they affect English pronunciation. It is important for English language learners to understand these processes as they allow students to improve fluency and precision in oral production.
The document discusses the different manners of articulation in phonetics and phonology. It describes stops, fricatives, affricates, approximants, and liquids. Stops are consonants produced by completely stopping airflow in the oral cavity. Fricatives are produced with a narrowing but not complete closure of the articulators, creating friction. Affricates begin as stops and end as fricatives. Approximants like liquids and glides involve close approximation but not complete closure of the articulators. The document provides examples and details on place and manner of articulation for each class of sounds.
The Prague School was an influential group of linguists, philosophers and literary critics active from 1928-1939 in Prague, Czechoslovakia. Key figures included Roman Jakobson, Nikolai Trubetzkoy, and Vilem Mathernis. The School developed methods of structuralist literary analysis and the theory of standard language. They combined structuralism, which examines how components relate within a system, with functionalism, which looks at how components fulfill specific functions. The School made contributions to phonology, stylistics, and developed concepts like functional sentence perspective.
1) Phonology is the study of speech sounds and how they are organized in languages. It examines units of sound like phonemes, morphemes, and their patterns.
2) Speech sounds can be classified as either consonants or vowels. Consonants involve restricting air flow while vowels allow free flow of air to create different sounds.
3) The relationship between phonemic representations of words and their phonetic pronunciations is governed by rules of phonology. These rules include assimilation, dissimilation, and epenthesis.
This document discusses key concepts in phonology, including:
1. Phonology studies the distribution and interaction of sounds in a language, as well as how speech sounds are organized. It examines which sounds are predictable and the context that predicts them.
2. Phonetics studies how speech sounds are physically produced and perceived, while phonology studies how they are organized in a language.
3. Phonemes are abstract sound categories that underlie predictable phonetic variations called allophones. Choosing the underlying phonemic representation considers factors like naturalness, similarity between sounds, and how well it fits the language's patterns.
4. Phonological rules describe the environment where one sound becomes another, linking
This document discusses various phonological processes including assimilation, dissimilation, elision, metathesis, apocope, syncope, prothesis, and epenthesis. Assimilation is when a sound changes to become more like an adjacent sound, such as /n/ becoming dental before another dental sound. Dissimilation is the opposite process. Elision, metathesis, apocope, and syncope refer to the loss or reordering of sounds. Prothesis and epenthesis involve adding sounds, such as adding a vowel to break up consonant clusters. Secondary articulations like labialization, palatalization, and velarization can help explain many phonological processes.
Phonological rules are part of a speaker's knowledge of their language. They describe predictable changes in sounds and allow for more concise representations. Some key rules discussed include assimilation rules, which make sounds more similar to neighbors; vowel nasalization before nasal consonants; addition of features like aspiration; deletion or insertion of segments; and metathesis, or reordering of sounds. Phonological rules function to derive the phonetic form from an underlying phonemic representation. Speech errors provide evidence that these rules operate in language production.
This document discusses language variation and the different types of language varieties. It defines varieties as forms of language that differ in pronunciation, vocabulary, or grammar between regions, social classes, or functions. The key varieties discussed are standard language, dialects, registers, pidgins, creoles, classical languages, and lingua francas. Standard language is used widely for official purposes, while dialects vary regionally or among social groups. Registers differ based on social or occupational context. Pidgins emerge for communication between groups with no shared language, and creoles develop when pidgins are passed to children as a native language.
This document discusses code switching, which is when multilingual speakers alternate between two languages or varieties of the same language in a single conversation. It defines code switching as the process of keeping the linguistic features of each language while switching between them to facilitate conversation. There are three main types of code switching: inter-sentential, which occurs at sentence boundaries; intra-sentential, which occurs within sentences; and tag switching, where a word or phrase from another language is inserted into the conversation. Examples of each type are provided.
This document discusses phonetics, the scientific study of human speech sounds. It covers the three branches of phonetics: articulatory, acoustic, and auditory phonetics. It also describes the classification of consonant sounds according to their voicing, place of articulation in the mouth, and manner of articulation. Vowel sounds are described based on their tongue position and lip rounding. An activity section applies this knowledge by providing consonant sounds and their phonetic transcription, voicing, place and manner of articulation.
Phoneme consists of two parts: phon and eme. Phon refers to the shape of a sound, and phoneme is formed when eme is added to phon. A phoneme is the smallest unit in a language that can change meaning. A phoneme is a set of allophones, which are variants of the same phoneme that do not change meaning. An essential property of a phoneme is that it functions contrastively in a language.
This document discusses the causes of language change over time. There are three main causes: geographical separation, when dialects emerge as populations become isolated; borrowing, when languages adopt words and features from other languages they are exposed to; and internal change, which occurs naturally through processes like sound changes and shifts in meaning. Language also changes through social differentiation as groups adopt distinctive language varieties, and through natural processes that become conventionalized, like casual pronunciation changes.
This slide is the eighth session presentation of Introduction to Linguistics. The topic discussed is about phonology (phonemes and allophones). Alsi, it
Morphology is the study of word structure and formation. It analyzes the morphemic structure of words. A morpheme is the smallest unit of meaning, and words can consist of free morphemes that can stand alone or bound morphemes that cannot. There are two main types of bound morphemes: derivational morphemes that change a word's meaning or class, and inflectional morphemes that change grammatical information without altering meaning. Words are formed through processes like affixation, compounding, reduplication, blending, and others. Understanding morphology helps with reading comprehension and vocabulary development.
Syllables have three possible parts - an onset, nucleus, and coda. The onset is a consonant or consonant cluster at the start of a syllable. The nucleus forms the core and is usually a vowel or vowel combination. The coda is a consonant or consonant cluster at the end. In the word "cat", [c] is the onset, [a] is the nucleus, and [t] is the coda. The nucleus and any coda together form the rhyme of a syllable. Even in English, consonants like [叩1] can be syllable nuclei.
Phonology is the study of the sounds of human language and their patterns. It includes the study of phonemes, or distinctive sounds, and allophones, or predictable variants of phonemes. Phonotactics examines permissible sound combinations in a language. Morphophonemics describes how sounds change due to neighboring sounds or morphology. For example, the plural morpheme in English can be /s/, /z/, or /z/ depending on preceding sounds.
AntConc is a freeware corpus analysis toolkit designed for use in technical writing classrooms. It includes tools like a concordancer, word frequency generator, cluster analysis, and more. It has an intuitive interface and works on Windows, Linux, and Unix systems. Future updates will improve speed, add new features like viewing collocates, and better support annotated data.
This presentation covers major points about the Categorizing English world. It consists of other sub-points World Englishes, Braj Kachru, Several classifications schemes have been proposed, ENL, EFL, ESL, Developmental stages of English language, Exonormative
presentation of phone phoneme and allophones copy.pptTeacher
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This document defines and distinguishes between phones, phonemes, and allophones. Phones are the smallest units of sound in speech. Phonemes are the minimal distinctive units of sound that distinguish meaning. They are abstract categories that contain various phones. Allophones are variants of phonemes that do not change a word's meaning and occur in complementary distribution based on phonetic environment. The document provides examples of phones, phonemes, and allophones in English to illustrate the differences between these phonetic and phonological units.
This document discusses the key differences between phonetics and phonology. Phonetics deals with the physical properties of speech sounds, while phonology examines how sounds are organized into systems within languages. It defines phonology as the description of sound patterns in a language, focusing on abstract mental representations rather than physical sounds. The document introduces important phonological concepts like phonemes, allophones, minimal pairs, phonotactics, syllables, and co-articulation effects like assimilation and elision.
Word vs lexeme by james jamie 2014 presentation assigned by asifa memon lect...James Jamie
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The document discusses words and lexemes. It defines a word as the smallest meaningful unit in a language that can be used independently, representing a thought or psychological unit. A lexeme is the smallest semantic unit, which can be formed from root words through the addition of prefixes, suffixes, and affixes. While a word remains a word even if its class or form is changed, it will then represent a separate lexeme. Examples are provided to illustrate this distinction between words and lexemes.
The document discusses various phonological processes that occur in the English language. It defines phonological processes as the natural changes that occur in language sounds over time. Some key phonological processes discussed include linking, where sounds are connected between words; elision, where sounds are omitted to aid pronunciation; assimilation, where speech sounds take on attributes of surrounding sounds; coalescence, where two sounds merge into one; haplology, where similar syllables are reduced; and gemination, where consonants are prolonged. Examples are provided for each process to illustrate how they affect English pronunciation. It is important for English language learners to understand these processes as they allow students to improve fluency and precision in oral production.
The document discusses the different manners of articulation in phonetics and phonology. It describes stops, fricatives, affricates, approximants, and liquids. Stops are consonants produced by completely stopping airflow in the oral cavity. Fricatives are produced with a narrowing but not complete closure of the articulators, creating friction. Affricates begin as stops and end as fricatives. Approximants like liquids and glides involve close approximation but not complete closure of the articulators. The document provides examples and details on place and manner of articulation for each class of sounds.
The Prague School was an influential group of linguists, philosophers and literary critics active from 1928-1939 in Prague, Czechoslovakia. Key figures included Roman Jakobson, Nikolai Trubetzkoy, and Vilem Mathernis. The School developed methods of structuralist literary analysis and the theory of standard language. They combined structuralism, which examines how components relate within a system, with functionalism, which looks at how components fulfill specific functions. The School made contributions to phonology, stylistics, and developed concepts like functional sentence perspective.
1) Phonology is the study of speech sounds and how they are organized in languages. It examines units of sound like phonemes, morphemes, and their patterns.
2) Speech sounds can be classified as either consonants or vowels. Consonants involve restricting air flow while vowels allow free flow of air to create different sounds.
3) The relationship between phonemic representations of words and their phonetic pronunciations is governed by rules of phonology. These rules include assimilation, dissimilation, and epenthesis.
This document discusses key concepts in phonology, including:
1. Phonology studies the distribution and interaction of sounds in a language, as well as how speech sounds are organized. It examines which sounds are predictable and the context that predicts them.
2. Phonetics studies how speech sounds are physically produced and perceived, while phonology studies how they are organized in a language.
3. Phonemes are abstract sound categories that underlie predictable phonetic variations called allophones. Choosing the underlying phonemic representation considers factors like naturalness, similarity between sounds, and how well it fits the language's patterns.
4. Phonological rules describe the environment where one sound becomes another, linking
This document discusses various phonological processes including assimilation, dissimilation, elision, metathesis, apocope, syncope, prothesis, and epenthesis. Assimilation is when a sound changes to become more like an adjacent sound, such as /n/ becoming dental before another dental sound. Dissimilation is the opposite process. Elision, metathesis, apocope, and syncope refer to the loss or reordering of sounds. Prothesis and epenthesis involve adding sounds, such as adding a vowel to break up consonant clusters. Secondary articulations like labialization, palatalization, and velarization can help explain many phonological processes.
Phonological rules are part of a speaker's knowledge of their language. They describe predictable changes in sounds and allow for more concise representations. Some key rules discussed include assimilation rules, which make sounds more similar to neighbors; vowel nasalization before nasal consonants; addition of features like aspiration; deletion or insertion of segments; and metathesis, or reordering of sounds. Phonological rules function to derive the phonetic form from an underlying phonemic representation. Speech errors provide evidence that these rules operate in language production.
This document discusses language variation and the different types of language varieties. It defines varieties as forms of language that differ in pronunciation, vocabulary, or grammar between regions, social classes, or functions. The key varieties discussed are standard language, dialects, registers, pidgins, creoles, classical languages, and lingua francas. Standard language is used widely for official purposes, while dialects vary regionally or among social groups. Registers differ based on social or occupational context. Pidgins emerge for communication between groups with no shared language, and creoles develop when pidgins are passed to children as a native language.
This document discusses code switching, which is when multilingual speakers alternate between two languages or varieties of the same language in a single conversation. It defines code switching as the process of keeping the linguistic features of each language while switching between them to facilitate conversation. There are three main types of code switching: inter-sentential, which occurs at sentence boundaries; intra-sentential, which occurs within sentences; and tag switching, where a word or phrase from another language is inserted into the conversation. Examples of each type are provided.
This document discusses phonetics, the scientific study of human speech sounds. It covers the three branches of phonetics: articulatory, acoustic, and auditory phonetics. It also describes the classification of consonant sounds according to their voicing, place of articulation in the mouth, and manner of articulation. Vowel sounds are described based on their tongue position and lip rounding. An activity section applies this knowledge by providing consonant sounds and their phonetic transcription, voicing, place and manner of articulation.
Phoneme consists of two parts: phon and eme. Phon refers to the shape of a sound, and phoneme is formed when eme is added to phon. A phoneme is the smallest unit in a language that can change meaning. A phoneme is a set of allophones, which are variants of the same phoneme that do not change meaning. An essential property of a phoneme is that it functions contrastively in a language.
This document discusses the causes of language change over time. There are three main causes: geographical separation, when dialects emerge as populations become isolated; borrowing, when languages adopt words and features from other languages they are exposed to; and internal change, which occurs naturally through processes like sound changes and shifts in meaning. Language also changes through social differentiation as groups adopt distinctive language varieties, and through natural processes that become conventionalized, like casual pronunciation changes.
This slide is the eighth session presentation of Introduction to Linguistics. The topic discussed is about phonology (phonemes and allophones). Alsi, it
Morphology is the study of word structure and formation. It analyzes the morphemic structure of words. A morpheme is the smallest unit of meaning, and words can consist of free morphemes that can stand alone or bound morphemes that cannot. There are two main types of bound morphemes: derivational morphemes that change a word's meaning or class, and inflectional morphemes that change grammatical information without altering meaning. Words are formed through processes like affixation, compounding, reduplication, blending, and others. Understanding morphology helps with reading comprehension and vocabulary development.
Syllables have three possible parts - an onset, nucleus, and coda. The onset is a consonant or consonant cluster at the start of a syllable. The nucleus forms the core and is usually a vowel or vowel combination. The coda is a consonant or consonant cluster at the end. In the word "cat", [c] is the onset, [a] is the nucleus, and [t] is the coda. The nucleus and any coda together form the rhyme of a syllable. Even in English, consonants like [叩1] can be syllable nuclei.
Phonology is the study of the sounds of human language and their patterns. It includes the study of phonemes, or distinctive sounds, and allophones, or predictable variants of phonemes. Phonotactics examines permissible sound combinations in a language. Morphophonemics describes how sounds change due to neighboring sounds or morphology. For example, the plural morpheme in English can be /s/, /z/, or /z/ depending on preceding sounds.
Phonetics is the study of speech sounds and includes three branches: articulatory phonetics examines sound production, acoustic phonetics studies sound transmission, and auditory phonetics looks at sound perception. Phonology analyzes the system of phonemes, or abstract units of sound, that make meaningful distinctions in a language. Phonemes have allophones as different phonetic realizations. Allophones are in complementary distribution if they occur in different environments or show free variation if they occur in the same environment without meaning differences. Suprasegmental phonology examines stress, rhythm, and intonation across segments.
The sounds [w] and [] in the given words are allophones of the same phoneme. They are in complementary distribution, with [w] occurring after vowels and [] occurring word-initially. The phonological rule is that the phoneme is realized as [w] in the environment of _V (after a vowel) and as [] elsewhere, specifically word-initially. As they do not contrast meaningfully in any context, [w] and [] are considered variants of the same underlying phoneme.
This document discusses several topics related to linguistics and language. It begins by discussing the fields of psycholinguistics, sociolinguistics, and dialectology. Psycholinguistics studies language acquisition and production/comprehension processes. Sociolinguistics examines how social factors influence language use. Dialectology explores geographic language variations. The document then covers linguistic subfields like phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, and pragmatics. Finally, it provides information on phonology, focusing on phonemes, allophones, phonological rules, and phonotactic patterns that vary between languages.
1) Phonological processes are sound changes that occur in spoken language. This document discusses several English phonological processes including aspiration of consonants, flapping of /t/ and /d/, vowel lengthening before voiced consonants, and assimilation which causes sounds to become more similar to neighboring sounds.
2) The document also covers sound changes involving insertion, deletion, or modification of sounds within words through processes like epenthesis, metathesis, apocope, syncope, and apophony which involve internal changes to indicate grammatical information.
3) Examples of sound changes from other languages like Spanish and Tagalog are provided to illustrate how these phonological processes can vary across languages.
The document discusses several key concepts in phonology:
1) Speech sounds can be decomposed into articulatory features that distinguish consonants and vowels across languages.
2) Phonemes are the basic sound units of a language and can be identified through minimal pairs.
3) Syllables group speech sounds and are important units for phonological rules and well-formed words. Languages vary in permissible syllable structures.
This document discusses the sound patterns of language. It defines phonology as the description of speech sound systems and patterns in a language. Phonology is concerned with the abstract set of sounds that distinguish meaning. Phonemes are the smallest units of sound that make a difference in meaning. Allophones are different versions of the same phoneme. The document discusses minimal pairs, phonotactics, syllable structure, consonant clusters, and coarticulation effects like assimilation and elision.
Phonology: The Sound Patterns of LanguageBabylen Arit
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The document discusses several key concepts in phonology:
1. Phonology is concerned with how sounds function and pattern in a language. It describes how speech sounds are organized and affect one another in pronunciation.
2. Phonemes are abstract mental representations of sounds, not the physical sounds themselves. Minimal pairs can be used to identify phonemes by finding words that differ in only one sound.
3. Allophones are different versions of the same underlying phoneme. They are non-contrastive and found in complementary distribution, occurring in different phonetic environments.
The document discusses the sound system of human language, known as phonology. It defines key phonological concepts like phonemes, allophones, distinctive features, and phonotactics. Phonemes are distinctive sounds that differentiate meaning, while allophones are predictable variants of phonemes. Phonotactics refer to permissible sound combinations within a language. The document provides examples to illustrate these concepts and their application in linguistic analysis.
Phonetics and phonology are both linguistic fields that are interested in the role of sound in language. The importance of learning phonetics and phonology for someone whose first language is not English is paramount.
Learning phonetics will help a foreign speaker sound more like a native speaker by making them aware of the different sounds that English makes use of.
A presentation prepared in this regards is being shared herewith for the records and general sharing. :)
This file is created for English literature students in universities especially for BA students. It is adapted from The study of language by George Yule. I hope this will help you
Lecture slides unit 1, intro. to phonetics and phonologyInvisible_Vision
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This document provides an overview of phonetics and phonology. It defines key terms like phoneme, allophone, minimal pair, and phonotactics. Phonemes are the smallest units of sound that distinguish meaning. Allophones are variant pronunciations of the same phoneme. Minimal pairs are words that differ by one phoneme. Phonotactics refer to the patterns of permissible sounds in a language. The document explains these concepts and provides examples to illustrate them. It also distinguishes between phonetics, which studies sound production/perception, and phonology, which analyzes sound patterns and systems in a language.
The document discusses several key concepts in phonology:
- Phonology describes the sound patterns and systems of a language. Phonemes are abstract sound units that distinguish meaning. Allophones are variant pronunciations of the same phoneme.
- English has consonant and vowel sounds that combine to form syllables based on their onset, nucleus, and coda. Phonotactics govern permissible sound combinations.
- Assimilation, nasalization, and elision are common phonological processes where sounds influence each other in connected speech. Assimilation involves one sound taking on traits of another sound, while elision omits sounds altogether.
This document provides an overview of syntax, which studies sentence structure. It discusses that speakers can produce an infinite number of sentences through combining words and phrases. It also covers parts of speech, including nouns, verbs, adjectives, and more. Additionally, it explains that English follows a subject-verb-object word order and introduces the concept of phrases, including how they can be identified and moved around in sentences.
This document provides an overview of phonology, the study of sound patterns in language. It defines key phonological concepts like phonemes, phones, allophones, minimal pairs, syllables, consonant clusters, and coarticulation effects. Phonemes are abstract sound units that distinguish meaning, while phones are actual speech sounds that can vary physically. Allophones are different versions of the same phoneme. Minimal pairs illustrate phonemic contrasts. Syllables have an onset, nucleus, and optional coda. Phonotactics govern sound combinations. Coarticulation effects like assimilation and elision influence pronunciation. The document concludes that individuals' vocal tracts differ physically but languages maintain abstract sound systems.
This document discusses phonology and the relationship between phonemes and allophones. It defines phonemes as the smallest units of sound that distinguish meaning, while allophones are predictable variants of phonemes that are conditioned by their context. Phonemes group sets of similar-sounding allophones. For example, [p] and [ph] in English are allophones of the same /p/ phoneme because they occur in complementary distribution and can be substituted without changing a word's meaning. Allophones are phonetic realizations of phonemes that follow language-specific rules.
This document provides an overview of phonetics and phonology. It discusses:
1. Phonetics is the scientific study of human speech sounds, including their production (articulatory phonetics), transmission (acoustic phonetics), and perception (auditory phonetics).
2. Phonology studies how speech sounds are organized and pattern in a given language. It focuses on a particular language, whereas phonetics studies speech sounds more generally.
3. The document outlines the major consonant and vowel sounds in English, and discusses topics like place and manner of articulation, stress, intonation, assimilation and dissimilation rules.
This document discusses phonology and phonetics. Phonology is the study of sound patterns in language, while phonetics is the physical properties and production of speech sounds. A phoneme is a meaningful sound unit in a language, represented between slashes. An allophone is a phonetic realization of a phoneme. For example, the 'p' sound in 'paper' and 'spill' are allophones of the phoneme /p/ in English. Phonemes contrast meaning between words, like 'rowing' vs. 'mowing', while allophones do not change meaning. The minimal pairs test examines if two sounds can change the meaning of words when swapped, like "take" vs. "tape".
2. Phonology
Phonology is the study of sound patterns
found in human language. It is concerned
with how sounds are organized in a
language. Phonology examines what occurs
to speech sounds when they are combined
to form a word and how these speech
sounds interact with each other.
3. Phonology
Itendeavours to explain what these
phonological processes are in terms of
formal rules.It is also the term used to refer
to the kind of knowledge that speakers have
about the sound patterns of their particular
language. Phonology is
1-The study of sound patterns in language
2-the sound pattern of a language
4. Phonetics(sesbilgisi) or
Phonology (sesbilim)
Phonetics deals with how speech sounds are
actually made, transmitted and received.
Phonology, on the other hand, deals
specifically with the ways those sounds are
organized into the individual languages.
Phonology is, in effect, a sub-category of
phonetics.
5. Phonetics or Phonology
Phonetics is the study of all the sounds that the
human voice is capable of creating whereas
phonology is the study of a subset of those sounds
that constitute language and meaning.
Of course, most of the principles that apply to the
study of phonetics also apply to the study of
phonology. In many instances, they are
indistinguishable from one another.
6. Phonological Knowledge
The phonological knowledge is necessary as
it permits a speaker, specifically,
To produce sounds which form meaningful
utterances
To recognize a foreign accent
To add the appropriate phonetic segments to
form plurals and past tenses.
7. Phonological Knowledge
To produce aspirated and unaspirated
voiceless stops in the appropriate context.
To know what is or what is not a sound in
ones language.
To know that different phonetic strings may
represent the same meaningful unit.
8. Key Terminology in Phonology
Phone- the smallest ,discrete and perceptible
segment of speech sound.
/p/ /t/ /k/ /e/
9. Phonemes
Phonemes are sounds that actually mean something
in a particular language. While they usually do not
stand for a particular idea, they play meaningful roles
in words. A unit of speech is considered a phoneme
if replacing it in a word result in a change of
meaning.
For example, while some people may pronounce the
vowel sound in the word "buy" differently, these
different pronunciations do not result in different
words. Thus, the different sounds are not separate
phonemes.
11. Allophones
For example [p] and [pH] are the allophones
of the phoneme /p/ and [t] and [tH] are the
allophones of the phonemes
PHin spin
A phoneme is a family of similar sounds
which a language treats as being "the same".
Members of the family are called its
allophones. In English, [p] and [ph] are
allophones of the /p/ phoneme.
[pH]it spit
12. Allophones
(aspirated-unaspirated)
An example: Compare pit and spit. The first
consonant of pit has an extra puff of air after
it which is not found after the [p] of spit. This
extra puff of air can be transcribed with the
IPA diacritic for aspiration, a superscript "h":
13. Allophones
Switching allophones of the same phoneme
won't change the meaning of the word:
[sphIt] still means 'spit'.
Switching allophones of different phonemes
will change the meaning of the word or result
in a nonsense word: [skIt] and [stIt] do not
mean 'spit'.
/th/ /D/ /t-/ seen vs seed /i:/ vs /~i/
14. Minimal Pairs
Phonemic distinctions are tested through minimal
pairs. To determine whether two sounds in a
language are distinctive , it is necessary to identify a
minimal pair- a pair of words that differ by a single
sound in the same position, but are otherwise
identical.
Bat pat
Pill bill
Beed deed
Pit kit are minimal pairs.
15. Free Variations
Free variation is the interchangeable
relationship between two phones, in which
the phones may substitute for one another in
the same environment without causing a
change in meaning.
Free variation may occur between
allophones or phonemes.
16. Examples (English)
In utterance-final position, there is free variation
between unreleased and aspirated plosives, as
demonstrated below:
[hQt|] hat
[hQtH] hat
In the word data, there is free variation between the
phonemes /ei/ and /a:/, as demonstrated below:
[deit ] data
[da:t] data
17. Complementary distribution
Complementary distribution is the mutually
exclusive relationship between two
phonetically similar segments. It exists when
one segment occurs in an environment
where the other segment never occurs
18. Examples (English)
The phones [p] and [pH] are in
complementary distribution. [pH] occurs
syllable-initially in a stressed syllable as in
spot, spit, spark, but [p] never does, as
demonstrated here: pepper versus spin
20. Phonological Rules
Rules make certain predictions about the pronunciation of
a language. For example; in English
1- Nasalize vowels and diphtongs before nasals (thing)
2-Aspirate voiceless stops before stressed vowels at the
beginning of a word or syllable.Therefore they specify the
class of sounds, affected by the rules(1), (pot)
Vowels and diphtongs in 1
Voiceless stops in 2
they state what phonetic changes are to occur
nasalize and aspirate
21. Phonological Rules
These rules specify the context or the
phonemic environment of the relevant
sounds.
Before nasals in 1
Before stressed vowels at the beginning of a
word or syllable.
22. Phonological Rules
instead of becomes an
arrow is used.
[-Consonantal] (a glide
or vowel)
[+nasal] before a
[+nasal]
23. Phonological Rules
A slash / means in the environment of
A dash - before and after the segment
(s) that determine the change
[-voiced] [+aspirated] / $ -
[-consonantal and +stress] (a vowel or glide
nasalized in the environment after a nasal)
24. Assimilation Rules
The Vowel Nasalization rule (a vowel or glide
is nasalized before and after a nasal) is an
assimilation rule. It assimilates one segment
to another by copying or spreading a feature
of a sequential phoneme making two
phonemes more similar(coarticulation).
bomb
25. Assimilation Rules
#The phonemes /t/ and /d/ often become bilabial
before bilabial consonants /p/, /b/, /m/
Ex. He is a rather fat boy
# /t/ assimilates to /k/ before /k/ and /g/. /d/
assimilates to /t/ before /k/ and /g/.
Ex.Where has that cat been all night? /t/ assimilates
to /k/
Ex. It was a very good concert /d/ assimilates to /g/
26. Assimilation
/n/ can assimilate to / 侶/ before k and g
As in Ive been going too much lately.
/s/ assimilates to
As in This shiny bag
/z/ assimilates to /亰/ before
27. Assimilation in Turkish
Lenis Voiced stops become fortis voiceless
stops. /d/ assimilates to /巽/
aa巽-dan aa巽-tan
ocak-c脹-ocak-巽脹
se巽-gin- se巽-kin
ka巽-d脹 ka巽-t脹
28. Dissimilation Rules
The value of a feature of a segment changes
to become different from that of a
neighbouring segment. For example, An
aspirated sound becomes unaspirated if it
occurs before certain sounds
29. Elision/Deletion (ses d端mesi)
Itdescribes the disapperance of a sound.
We arrived next day. /t/ vs/d/ /t/ elided
betw. /ks/ and /d/
Complex consonant are simplified.
Ex.She acts /aekts/ becomes /aeks/
// schwa disappears in unstressed syllables
Ex. We should call the police
30. Elision/Deletion (ses d端mesi)
In Turkish k端巽端-c端k- k端巽端c端k
Du bakal脹m, gelmiyo.,aya:n脹m,kuru kuru
Ak脹l脹m- akl脹m; a脹z脹m-az脹m,
In English, mystery-mystry;
In French, petite tableaux
31. Insertion
An additional sound is inserted
Ex. Tiren (turkish)
Gurup
Scutary ( rumca) 端sk端dar azc脹k az脹c脹k
darc脹k darac脹k
32. Word Stress
Word stress (THE SYLLABLE PRONUNCED MORE
STRONGLY, SHOWN BEFORE THE STRESSED
SYLLABLE.
QUAlify, baNAna, underSTAND
One of the syllables will sound louder than other
idenfiable syllables. Ooo, oOo, ooO
Many everyday nouns and adjs of two syllable length
are stressed on the first syllable.
34. Rules of word stress
Core vocabulary: first syllable stress lile MOther,
WAter, PAper etc.
Prefixes and suffixes : not stressed QUIetly,
oRIGinally, exceptions: BIcycle, DISlocate
Compound words: first element stressed like
POSTman, NEWSpaper, TEApot
Words having a dual role: either a noun or a verb
PREsent(n) preSENT (v)
IMport(n) imPORT(v)
35. Stress timing (Isochronicity)
Syllable timing
English, Arabic and Russian are stress timed
languages. Stresses occur at regular intervals in
connected speech. The duration of an utterance is
dependent on the number of the stresses than the
number of the syllables.
Japanese, French, and Spanish are syllable timed
languages. There is no strong stress pattern.
Syllables maintain their length and vowels maintain
their quality. (see p.70)
36. Tonic Syllables- Onset syllable
Tonicsyllable The most important word in a
sentence
Onset syllable -where the sentence stress
starts
The use of tonic syllables is closely related to
intonation.
37. Sentence stress
Some words in a sentence are uttered more
loudly. It is closely related to intonation.
He LIVES in the HOUSE in the CORner.
38. Sentence- meaning-
L LOVE you ( AND I want you to know this)
I love YOU (nobody else)
I love you ( he does not)
39. Intonation
Itrefers to the way the voice goes up and
down in pitch when we are speaking.
Although all languages have it, there are
tone languages like Chinese in which the
voice is used quite differently, which
determines the meaning. Ma in Chinese
may mean mother , hemp (kenevir) or scold
depending on whether voice goes up and
down and stays level.