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Week 4

The document discusses phonology and related linguistic concepts. It defines phonology and phonetics, and describes phonemes and allophones. It also covers broad and narrow transcription, complementary distribution, minimal pairs, contrastive vs. complementary distribution, natural classes, and phonological rules.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
45 views33 pages

Week 4

The document discusses phonology and related linguistic concepts. It defines phonology and phonetics, and describes phonemes and allophones. It also covers broad and narrow transcription, complementary distribution, minimal pairs, contrastive vs. complementary distribution, natural classes, and phonological rules.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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PHONOLOGY

1
Phonology vs phonetics

■ Phonetics: study of speech sounds


■ Phonology: study of sound systems
– How sounds pattern together

2
Phonemes and allophones

■ /Phoneme/ – what a speaker perceives as


a single sound
– Language specific
– Mental representation of speech
■ [Allophone]
– Phones that realize a particular
phoneme

3
Broad and narrow
transcription
■ Broad transcription captures phonemes
– Represented in /slashes/
■ Narrow transcription captures phonetic
detail
– Represented in [square brackets]
■ Level of detail somewhat varies
pad pan lab lamb
Broad: /pæd/ /pæn/ /læb/ /læm/
Narrow: [pʰæd] [pʰæ̃n] [læb] [læ̃m]
4
Phonemes and allophones

One mental representation /p/


Two real world realizations [p] and [pʰ]

/p/
[p]
[pʰ]

5
Complementary Distribution

Two realizations of the same underlying person


6
Complementary distribution

■ Example: English voiceless stop aspiration


– Stops /p t k/ may be aspirated or
unaspirated
– Aspiration occurs in a specific
environment

– pit spit sip


– [pʰɪt] [spɪt] [sɪp]

7
Minimal pairs

■ A pair of words which differ by only one


sound, this difference in sound changes
meaning
■ Ex: meet [mit] and neat [nit] are minimal
pairs
– Changing [m] to [n] changes meaning
■ [m] and [n] are in contrastive distribution
■ [m] and [n] are allophones of separate
phonemes, /m/ and /n/
8
Practice: Minimal pairs
Find minimal pairs demonstrating that the following pairs of
sounds are in fact distinct phonemes in English. Demonstrate
this in word-initial, word-internal, and word-final positions.

Initial Medial Final


kill/gill, bicker/bigger, lock/log,
/k/ and /g/
[kɪl] and [gɪl] [bɪkɹ̩ ] and [bɪgɹ̩ ] [læk] and [læg]
/m/ and
/n/
/s/ and /z/

/s/ and /ʃ/

/p/ and /b/


9
Contrastive and
Complementary distribution
Contrastive Complementary
Distribution Distribution
■ Allophones of different ■ Allophones of the same
phonemes phoneme
■ NO minimal pairs
■ Minimal (or near
minimal) pairs ■ NO overlapping
environments
■ Overlapping ■ Where you have one
environments sound, you will never
have the other
■ Where you have one
sound, you can put the ■ Sounds are phonetically
related
other (this will be a
different word) 10
Contrastive and
Complementary distribution
Contrastive Complementary
Distribution Distribution
■ Consider [k] and [ɡ] ■ Consider [k] and [kʰ]
■ change the [k] in [bæk] ■ Change the [k] in [ski] to
to [ɡ] and the result is [kʰ] result is [skʰi]
[bæɡ], a different word – Sounds odd, but not
■ [k] and [ɡ] allophones on a different word
separate phonemes /k/ ■ [k] and [kʰ] are
and / ɡ / allophones of the same
phoneme /k/

11
Practice

■ Consider oral and nasal vowels in english


– Vowels become nasalized before nasal
consonants
pad pan lab lamb
[pʰæd] [pʰæ̃n] [læb] [læ̃m]
■ [æ] and [æ̃] are allophones of phoneme /æ/

12
Practice

■ Consider oral and nasal vowels in French


beau bon
[bo] [bõ]
■ Are these minimal pairs?
■ Are they in complementary or contrastive
distribution
■ Are they allophones of the same phoneme
or different phonemes?
13
Natural classes

■ Natural class: a grouping of sounds that


share a certain feature or features
■ Used to explain phenomena that occur
across multiple sounds
■ Ex: /p t k/ for the natural class of voiceless
stops
■ /p t k/ are realized with or without
aspiration in the same contexts

14
Natural classes

■ Use [+/- feature] values


■ /p t k/ = [-voice, -continuant]
■ Use the minimal number of feature to
include what you need and exclude all
others

15
natural classes

■ Obstruents: fricatives, stops (plosives) and


affricates
– [-sonorant]
■ Sonorants – nasals, liquids and glides
– [+sonorant]
■ Approximants – liquids, vibrants and glides
– [+sonorant, -nasal]
■ Sibilants – hissing ‘s’- like sounds
– [+strident]
– [s z ʃ ʒ ʧ ʤ]

16
Natural classes: features

What combination of features will include


all fricatives /f v θ ð s z ʃ ʒ h/ and
exclude all other sounds?

• [-sonorant] includes only stops,


fricatives and affricates
• [+continuant] excludes stops and
affricates
• The natural class fricatives is defined
as [-sonorant, +continuant]
17
Practice
Use the features chart to define the natural
class for the following groups of sound using
+/- features
■ /g p t d k b/
[-continuant, -sonorant, -strident]
■ /i e ɛ æ ʌ a ɪ ə/
[-round]
■ /p b m/
[+labial, -continuant]

18
Rules

■ Rules capture the environments in which different


allophones occur
■ Rules can be written in prose:
– A becomes B in the environment of C and D
■ Or shorthand:
■ A B /C__D

Simplified example from Spanish data Set:


■ /d/ becomes [ð] between vowels (inter-vocalically) and
[d] elsewhere
/d/  [ð] / V_V
[d] / elsewhere
19
Shorthand

■ # word boundary
■ # – word boundary
■ σ – syllable boundary
■ V – vowel
■ C – consonant

20
Khmer

The following data is form the Austronesian


language Khmer. Examine the distribution of [pʰ],
[tʰ], [kʰ] and [p], [t], [k]. Are they allophones of the
same or different phonemes?
[tarm] ‘to wish
[pʰak] ‘be suffocated’
[kem] ‘to cut’
[tʰarm] ‘also’
[pak] ‘to support’
[kʰem] ‘to polish
21
Khmer

■ Are there minimal pairs?


– Yes

[tarm] ‘to wish


[pʰak] ‘be suffocated’
[kem] ‘to cut’
[tʰarm] ‘also’
[pak] ‘to support’
[kʰem] ‘to polish

22
Khmer

■ Are there minimal pairs?


– Yes

[tarm] ‘to wish


[pʰak] ‘be suffocated’
[kem] ‘to cut’
[tʰarm] ‘also’
[pak] ‘to support’
[kʰem] ‘to polish

23
Khmer

■ Presence of minimal pairs indicates


contrastive distributionof the following:
– [t] and [tʰ]
– [p] and [pʰ]
– [k] and [kʰ]
■ Indicates separate phonemes:
– /t/ and /tʰ/
– /p/ and /pʰ/
– /k/ and /kʰ/
24
Hebrew

Step 3: If no minimal pairs, list the environments


■ [bika] ‘lamented’
■ [mugbal] ‘limited’
■ [ʃavar] ‘broke’
■ [ʔikev] ‘delayed’
■ [bara] ‘created’
Write out the sound that immediately precedes and follows
the phones in question.
Use ___ to represent the sounds in question (preceding
___following
Oraganize in columns, one per sound being investigated
Hebrew

Step 3: If no minimal pairs, list the environments


■ [bika] ‘lamented’
■ [mugbal] ‘limited’
■ [ʃavar] ‘broke’
■ [ʔikev] ‘delayed’
■ [bara] ‘created’
[v] [b]

a_a #_i
e_# g_a
#_a
Doe the envrionments overlap?
No – This means complementary distribtion
Hebrew

Step 4: make a generalization about where the


sounds occur
■ Which environment is more interesting? Before
or after?
■ Where does [b]
– After consonants and word boundaries
■ Where does [v] occur?
– After vowels
Hebrew

Step 5: determine the underlying form


■ The underlying form is typically the sound with they
wider distribution
– Wider distribution = occurs in more
environments
■ Does [b] or [v] have wider distribution?
[v]
/?/
[b]
Hebrew

Step 5: determine the underlying form


■ The underlying form is typically the sound with they
wider distribution
– Wider distribution = occurs in more
environments
■ Does [b] or [v] have wider distribution?
[v]
/b/
[b]
Hebrew

Step 6: Write the rule


■ Specify the environment in which each
allophone is realized

– /b/ becomes [v] after vowels (and [b]


elsewhere)
– /b/  [v] / V__
( [b] elsewhere)
Practice: Korean
Using the steps, consider the distribution of [s]
and [ʃ]:

31
Practice: Korean
Using the steps, consider the distribution of [s]
and [ʃ]:

/s/  [ʃ] / __[i]


[+strident, -voice]  [-anterior]/ ____[+high,
+front]
/s/ become [ʃ] before high front vowel [i]

32
Phonological Processes

■ Elision/deletion/subtraction
– family /fæmɪli/  [fæmli]
■ Epenthesis: insertion/addition
– strength /stɹɛŋθ/  [stɹɛŋkθ]
■ Assimilation: one or more features spread to a
neighboring sound
– /stɹɛŋθ/  [stɹɛn̪θ]
■ Metathesis: switching
– asked /æskt/  [ækst]
33

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