Eng103 - Report
Eng103 - Report
Eng103 - Report
ENGLISH
PHONOLOGY: The
Sound and Their
Features
Group 4 Cuyos, Jazel Delacruz, Carlos
English Phonology and Morphology
TOPICS
1. What is Phonology?
Sound
Phone
Phonemes
Aspiration
Voiceless Stops
2.
Phonological
Processes A.
Types of
Phonological
ProcessesAssimi
lation
Dissimilation
Nasalization
Deletion
Insertion
Vowel Reduction
Metathesis
PHONOLOG
Y One of the core fields that
compose the discipline of
linguistics, which is the scientific
study of language structure.
HOW
PHONOLOGY
DIFFERS FROM
THE RELATED
DISCIPLINE OF
PHONETICS?
While phonetics and phonology both deal with language
sound, they address different aspects of sound.
Phonetics Phonology
Sound
Linguists use the word sound
to refer to any difference
that's relevant for any
language.
FOR
EXAMPLE:
'wadder" and "waTer" mean the same
thing in English, so the distinction
between these sounds isn't relevant for
English speakers.
Phoneme
Refer to the smallest
distinct and constrictive
units of linguistics that
bring about the
different of meaning.
[tʰ ] [t]
Aspirated Unaspirated
In linguistic terms, we say that
these two phones are part of
the same phoneme in English.
Specifically, we say that
aspirated [tʰ ] and
unspirated [t] are
allophones of the same
phoneme ing English.
They're technically
different, but English
speakers think of them as
the same sound.
Different Phones Different
and Phonesbut notDifferent
Different Phonemes Phonemes
The unaspirated [t]
always occurs after an [s]
or at the end of a word,
while the aspirated [tʰ ]
always occurs at the
beginning of a word.
VOICELESS STOPS
unaspirated at the beginning of an
unstressed syllable. They're also
unaspirated in any other position,
like at the end of a syllable or the
end of a word. And even if a
syllable is stressed, a voiceless
stop is unaspirated if it follows. In
English, voiced stops are never
aspirated.
In English, the sounds [p], [t], and [k] are voiceless stops
(also called plosives). The sounds [b], [d], and [g] are
voiced stops.
PHONOLOGICAL PROCESSES
Patterns of sound errors that typically
developing children use to simplify
speech as they are learning to talk.
They do this because they lack the
ability to appropriately coordinate their
lips, tongue, teeth, palate and jaw for
clear speech.
TYPES OF
PHONOLOGICAL
PROCESSES
1. ASSIMILATION
Assimilation is the most
common phonological
process in several
languages. The assimilation
itself is a process that
makes a similar sound by
another sound that sounds
similar in one or more
features.
Example:
Example:
• Bad boy : / bæd boi/ becomes /
bæbboi/ • Five pence : / faiv pens/
becomes / faif pens/ • Want to : / wɔnt
tu:/ becomes / wɔn nə/
2. Progressive assimilation: means that
the phonemes that follows is affected by
other phonemes that precede it.
Example:
Example:
• The /ø/ as a fricative sounds can
converts to dissimilar from the
preceding fricative by having a stop,
such as: • fifth : [fifθ]
• sixth : [siksθ]
Both of them end with a voiceless fricative
followed by a voiceless interdental fricative.
However, some English native speakers
pronounce them by replacing the / θ/ with t so
it becomes ‘fift’ and ‘siskt’.
Example:
• Be /bi/ Bean /bin/
• Lay /le/ • Bead • Lame /lem/ •
/bæ/ • Lace /les/ • Bang /bæŋ/ • Boot
Bad /bæd/ • /but/ • But /bʌt/ • Boat
/bot/ • Bought /bɔt/
4. Deletion - is a rule of phonological
progress that works to remove the
sound segment from a certain word.
Example:
Example:
• Please : /pə liz/ instead of /pliz/
• Film : /filəm/ instead of /film/
• Hamster : /hæmpster/ instead
of /hæmster/ • Strength : /strɛŋkθ/
instead of /strɛŋθ/
• Ankle : /əŋkəl/ instead of /ənkl/
6. Vowel Reduction - we’ve learned about the
deletion rule of phonological processes
before. But sometimes, we can also find a
word that has a sound that isn’t really
ignored, or that they don’t disappear
completely, so technically, the sounds are
reduced. To articulate this phonetic
characteristic, our tongue needs to be more
centralized than the average, to reduce the
vowel segment sounds.
Example:
• In
unstresse
d
syllables,
the vowel
is often
reduced