Title: Phonological rules
1Phonological rules
2Foreign accents and borrowed words
- Borrowed words
- often pronounced according to phonological rules
of borrowing language - Foreign accents
- result from application of native language
phonology to target language phonology - especially if language learned as adult
3Spanish loans into English
Spanish in English
pA?res Padres phAd?ez
tAko taco thAko
burito burrito b??i?o
sAndje?o San Diego s?ndiego
r alveolar trill ? voiced velar fricative
? retroflex approximant ? alveolar flap
4The original shibboleth
5Some types of phonological rules
- Assimilation (cf. phonetic coarticulation)
- Dissimilation
- Deletion
- Epenthesis
6Examples of phonological rules
- Assimilation
- Mohawk Voicing
- Nasal Assimilation in Italian (and many other
languages) - Korean s-palatalization
7Witsuwiten
? and ? after non-lowering consonants
q voiceless uvular stop q uvular
ejective ch voiceless aspirated palatal
stop X voiceless uvular fricative ?
voiceless lateral fricative ? voiced uvular
approximant m glottalized nasal
nt?q up t?z driftwood t?Xcho blue grouse
tilt?s shes in a rush n?q uphill n?s ahead
?n?X dark birthmark tin?? its slithering p?p?t its abdomen
ip?X its flooding we?p?ts it isnt rolling t?qaj cutthroat trout
t?lt?m its pounding n?n?? it (cloth) is moving p?l?m its ice
8Witsuwiten consonant chart
labial alveolar palatal labio-velar uvular glottal
stops p p t th t c ch c kw kwh kw q qh q ?
affricates ts tsh ts
lateral t? t?h t?
fricatives s z ç xw X h
lateral ?
nasals m n
approximants j w ?
lateral l
9Dissimilation
- A sound becomes less similar to another sound
- An example from Sanskrit
- Phonetic background from Hindi
- Sanskrit
-
- Hindi
5 retroflex
10Laryngeal contrasts in Hindi
- ? voiced retroflex stop
- ?Al branch
- ? voiceless retroflex stop
- ?Al postpone
- ?h voiceless aspirated retroflex stop
- ?hAl wood shop
- ?? (breathy) voiced aspirated retroflex stop
- ??Al shield
11Dissimilation
- Grassmans Law (Sanskrit)
- Voiced aspirated stops/affricates are deaspirated
before another voiced aspirated stop/affricate. - C? ? C / ___ ... C?
12Grassmans Law in Sanskrit
- b? voiced aspirated labial stop
- Rightmost voiced aspirate survives
/b?ud?jAte/ bud?jAte is awake
/b?ub?od?A/ bubod?A was awake
- Rightmost voiced aspirate devoices and
deaspirates before s (a different phonological
rule) leftmost survives
/b?od?sjati/ b?otsjati will be awake
13Deletion
- Cree. An Algonquian language spoken in Canada
(B.C. to Ontario)
/pisimw/ pisim sun
cf. /pisimwak/ pisimwak suns
- /w/ ? Ø / C ___ ( edge of
word)
14Epenthesis
- Witsuwiten
- No word can begin with /?/
- h epenthesized
- /?tsh??/ h?tsh?? (more narrowly, h?tsh??)
hes crying - Tsekene
- No word can begin with /?/
- ? epenthesized
- /?tsh??/ ??tsh?? hes crying
15Epenthesis
- English
- No word can begin with a vowel
- ? epenthesized
- uh-oh /??o/ ???o
- apple /æp?l/ ?æpl?
- the apple /ð?/ /æp?l/ ð??æpl?
16Phonetics vs. phonology
phonetics phonology
transcription narrower as needed typically broad, streamlined
phonetic detail explicitly represented as needed detail is predicted by rule system
contrast how is a particular contrast realized? what is contrastive?
sounds what are articulatory, acoustic, perceptible properties? how do sounds form patterns, classes? what are the phonological rules?
17Final thoughts about spoken language phonetics
and phonology
A clip from The Human Language, vol. 3