Phonology

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LING 1001B

January 30, 2014

Phonology  The study of •

distribution of sounds in a language –



How sounds are organized and used in natural languages.

the interactions between those different sounds –

Rules that specify how sounds interact with each other



What is the organization of sounds in a given language?



Which sounds are predictable and which are unpredictable in given contexts?



Which sounds affect the identities of words?

Phonetics ­ Phonology  Phonetics • Basis for phonological analysis •

Analyzes the production of all human speech sounds (regardless of language)

Phonology –

Basis for further work in morphology, syntax, discourse, etc.



Analyzes the sound patterns of a particular language •

Determining which phonetic sounds are significant



Explaining how these sounds are interpreted (by the native speaker)

What is a phoneme?  • The smallest contrastive unit in the sound system of a language. •

American structuralist tradition: –



Phoneme is defined according to its allophones and environments

Generative tradition: •

Phoneme is defined by a set of distinctive features.

LING 1001B

January 30, 2014

Distinctive features  • /p/



/i/

+syllabic

-syllabic

-consonantal

+consonantal

+sonorant

-sonorant

+high

+anterior

-low -back

-coronal

-round

-voice

+ATR

-continuant

-nasal

-nasal

Components of Generative Phonology  •

Phonetic representations are assigned to utterances –



Reflect native speaker’s internalized grammar

Levels of phonological representations –

Underlying representation



Phonetic representation

Phonological rules – Map underlying representations onto phonological representations. Name the largest city in Ontario  • Toronto, right? –

How did you say ‘Toronto’?



[təˈɹɑnto]



[ˈtɹɑnə]

Say the another name for purse  • handbag •

[hændbæg] ̃



[hænbæg] ̃



[hæmbæg] ̃

LING 1001B •

January 30, 2014

[hæmbæ?] ̃

Phonotactics  Certain sounds which are permissible in English  Ex. Psychology (starts with /s/) •

Possible words



Restrictions on what C and V patterns go together to making up syllables and words



Restrictions differ from one language to the other (ex. French and English)



Restrictions can be formulated in rules

Phonotactic constraints  = Restriction on possible combinations of sounds. Restrictions of word­initial consonants in English  • All may begin a word of English with two exceptions –

[ŋ] and [ʒ] (ex. The –ing in singer and the –sur in leisure)

Restrictions of word­initial consonants in English  • Two-consonant combinations –

Stop or fricative (ex. Print, bring, play) followed by a liquid or a glide •

[bɹ]

bring

[θɹ]

three



[gl]

glean

[fl]

fly



[mj]

music

[hj]

humour



[kw] quick



Internal grammar has figured out what permissible in language



Other two-consonant combinations –



[sw] sweet

[s] followed by voiceless and nasal stops •

[st]

steam



[sm]

smear



snoop

[s] followed by [f] and [v]

s and is not

LING 1001B



January 30, 2014 •

[sf] sphere



[sv] svelte

[ʃ] can be followed by [ɹ] in native English clusters •



[ʃɹ] shrink

a nasal stop or a liquid in non-native English clusters •

‘Schlemiel, Schnook, schlepp’



But also by a stop as in ‘Spiel’

Location of combination matters (ps in psychology vs. ps in stop)

Sound constraints in different positions  Syllable type  • Basic syllable structure •

Syllables’ can have consonants, vowels in any order or combination (ex. On next page)



2 main divisions –

Onset •



All consonants before the vowel

Rhyme (sometimes spelled rime) •

Nucleus: vowel or diphthong



Coda: consonants following vowel (if any

Multisyllabic words (English)  •



Two principles yield unique syllable structures –

Maximize onsets



Avoid rhymes ending in lax vowels

Maximize onsets in English –

As many consonants as possible into the onset •



Maximum determined by possible one-syllable words

Avoid rhymes ending in lax vowels –

e.g., *[bə], *[tɪ]

LING 1001B •

January 30, 2014

Simple closed syllable –

WORD

Syllable types in English  V= Vowel

C= consonant



V

• • •

VC at VCC ask VCCC asked

a • •

CV CCCV no CVC CCCVC knot spleen CVCCCCCVCC camp strength • •

Word

Word •



spree

LING 1001B

January 30, 2014

Syllable types in other languages Hawaiian

Indonesian

CV

CV

CV

V

V

CCV

VC

CCVC

CVC

CVC

No double consonant sounds

CVCC can’t have just a vowel

No coda in the syllable

Hebrew

Restraints in English  – Two stops combination •

‘Ptolemy’ –



‘Gdansk’ –



(English would not pronounce the /p?/)

(English would say Gudansk)

Stop and nasal •

‘gnostic’ –



English would not pronounce the /g/

‘Knish’

Restraints in other languages  • Japanese and Finnish





Avoid syllables containing Consonant sequences



Modify borrowed words



They do not allow consonant clusters

Finnish drops Cs –

Strand /sctant/ (CCCVCC) à ranta (CVNCV) ‘beach’...N= nasal



Glass /glas/ (CCVC) à lasi

LING 1001B •

January 30, 2014

Japanese inserts Vs –

CCC à CVCVCV •

Rule-governed and predictable –

After [t] and [d]: insert [o]



After all other consonants: insert [ɯ] »

Birth control

/bəɹθ kəntɹol / à [ba:sɯ kontoro:rɯ] -

Rules of what vowels are in certain positions

-

After an alveolar stop there has to be an /o/ in Japanese

Phonotactic constraints in signed languages  •



ASL specific: –

Monosyllbic sign cannot just consist of one handshape, one location, and one orientation; at least one of these segments must change in order to form a grammatical syllable.



Handshape change can occur in one location if a previous sign is comprised of no movement



Handshape change must occur during movement if there is movement in the previous sign



Also constraints on what signs may be adjacent to one another.

One-handed signs are performed with the dominant hand –

Restrictions on non-dominant hand •

If both hands are moving, non-dominant hand must have same handshape, orientation, and motion as dominant hand à symmetry constraint.

Direction may be parallel or anti-parallel p. 106/107 Signed code for Mandarin Chinese versus Taiwan Sign language (hearing people wanted to introduced new signs into Mandarin Chinese code the symmetry rule was thrown out the window. Then in Taiwan sign could not accept these new signs because of language rules)

LING 1001B

January 30, 2014

Foreign Accents  •

Spanish –

[st], [sk], [sp] clusters not permitted word-initially

à[ɛstudɛnt] •

Sound substitution (can not pronounce voiced fricative th- because of the place of articulation) –

French speakers

[ð] à [z] ‘this’ Why this sound? –

English speakers



[x] à [k] ‘Bach’



[x] à [h] ‘Bach’

Phonemes and Allophones  (un)predictability  English •

[k] and [g] not predictable



In English the pronunciation of k and g is not predictable

-

[b ɹ ɪ _____]

-

[b ɹ ɪ g] ‘sailing vessel’

-

[b ɹ ɪ k] ‘block used in masonry construction’ = Minimal pair (huge difference in meaning but small in pronunciation) = contrastive

Kikamba (Bantu language spoken in Kenya) •

[k] and [g] are predictable –

[g] can only occur after [ŋ] (rule)



[k] will never occur after [ŋ] (no exceptions)



If a velar stop in Kikamba:

LING 1001B

January 30, 2014 

[g] occurs after [ŋ], otherwise [k]

= complementary distribution •

English

-

if a velar stop in English:

-

[g] occurs after [ŋ], otherwise [k] ??????

No! -

anchor [æŋkɹ]̩

-

anger [æŋgɹ̩]

-

not predictable whether /k/ or /g/

Kikamba •

[katala]

‘count’



[okatala]

‘if you count’



[ŋgatala] ‘if I count’ •

Underlying tone in these words changes the /k/ to /g/ English

Phonemes

/k/

/g/

Allophones

[k]

[g]

Kikamba /k/ [k]

[g]

Phonemes and allophones  Allophonic variation  • [ kʰ æ̃n t ] can’t nasalized vowel •

[ pɹ o ŋ ̃ ]



[ pæ n ̃ ] /v/ [v]



v=vowel [v ]̃

Phonemic analysis •

[ kʰ æ̃n t ] vs. [kʰ æ n t ] •

No difference in meaning in English!

phoneme allophones

LING 1001B •

January 30, 2014 [ kʰ æ̃n t ] vs. [k æ̃ n t ] •



No difference in meaning in English!

P. 109 •



(1)



(2)



(3)

Gives different allophones