Chapter 6 The Sound Patterns of Language
Chapter 6 The Sound Patterns of Language
Phonology
Phonology is essentially the description of the system and pattern s of speech
sounds in a language. It is, in effect, based on a theory what every speaker of language
unconsciously knows about the sound patterns of that language. Phonology is concerned
with abstract or mental aspect of the sound in language rather than with actual physical
articulation of speech sounds.
Phonetic
Accoustic phonetic, the study of the physical properties of the sounds that are
produced.
Sapir (1925: 16-18) : two language can have the same inventory of phonetic
segments but have very different phonologies. Example : salz (zalt) ‘salt’ in german word
and salts (s lts) in English.
Phonemes
Each one o these meaning distinguishing sound in a language is described as
phoneme. Phoneme /t/ is described as a sound type, of which all the different spoken
versions of [t] are tokens. Slash marks are conventionally used to indicate phoneme. An
essential property of a phoneme is that it function contrasitively. We substitute one
sound for another in a word and there is a change of meaning, then the two sound
represent different phonemes.
Assimilation
When two phonemes occur in sequence and some aspect of one phoneme is taken
or ‘copied’ by other, this prosses is known as assimilation. Example, you may pronounce
and as [ænd] in isolation, but in the causal use of the phrase you and me, you almost
certainly say [en], as in [yuenmi].
Elision
The [d] sound of and has simply disappeared. This ‘omission’ sound segment
which would be present in the deliberate pronunciation of a word in isolation is
technically described as elision.
Redudancy and Distinctiveness
English has 2 kind of voiceless stop phonetically aspirated [ p h, t h, k h } and
unaspirated [p,t,k]
• Aspirated stop are found at beginning of words. Example : pin is pronounced
[p h in]
• On other hand, unaspirated stops are found after word initial ‘s’. example : spin is
pronounced [spin], not [sp h in]
Bibliography