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Phonology

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Title: Phonology


1
Phonology
October 25, 2010
2
Todays Plan
  • To begin with...
  • Phonetics homeworks to hand in!
  • Then
  • Another Simpsons-based Quick Write
  • Today Phonology
  • Wednesday review for mid-term.
  • Friday mid-term!
  • Note we will be splitting up into three
    separate rooms for the mid-term. (more details to
    come on Wednesday)


3
Phonology
  • The study of how the pronunciation of sounds
    changes according to context is called phonology.
  • We have already seen some phonological changes
    with respect to the phoneme /t/.

  • English /t/
  • Word Broad Narrow Description
  • top aspirated

stop unaspirated
batter flapped
kitten glottalized
nitrate /najtrejt/ palatalized
4
Phonemes and Allophones
  • Recall the basic idea behind the IPA is to have
    one symbol for each sound.
  • Principle of Contrast
  • There should be a separate letter for each
    distinctive sound that is, for each sound which,
    being used instead of another, in the same
    language, can change the meaning of the word.
  • Phonemes contrast with each other they are
    distinctive sounds
  • Allophones do not contrast with each other
  • They cannot distinguish between words.

5
Phonemes and Allophones
  • For example--t and d are two different sounds
    (phonemes) in English
  • they can change the meaning of a word--
  • tip vs. dip t vs. d pat vs. pad
  • Remember two words that differ in only one sound
    are called a minimal pair.
  • However, there is no minimal pair in English
    distinguished by a flap vs. a voiceless stop.
  • Canadian English bottom
  • British English bottom

6
Wait a second
  • Sounds that are distinctive, or contrast, in one
    language, are not necessarily distinctive in
    another.
  • Ex s and are distinctive in English.
  • sheep vs. seep
  • shack vs. sack
  • shoot vs. suit
  • mash vs. mass
  • etc.
  • But they are not distinctive in Japanese

7
Some Japanese Words
this year outside
a little to know
world to do
sugar to force/cause
  • Q Whats the pattern?
  • A appears before i ____ i
  • s appears elsewhere
  • There are no minimal pairs for and s in
    Japanese.

? In Japanese, they are not contrastive sounds.
8
Biblical Parallels
And the Gileadites took the fords of the Jordan
against the Ephraimites. And when any of the
fugitives of Ephraim said, Let me go over, the
men of Gilead said to him, Are you an
Ephraimite? When he said, No, they said to
him, Then say Shibboleth, and he said,
Sibboleth, for he could not pronounce it right
then they seized him and slew him at the fords of
the Jordan. --Judges 125-6
9
Modern-day Shibboleths
(Canadian) Jon (American) Steve
house howl bike bile
  • Also note (Canadian) Amber

10
Modern-day Shibboleths
  • Canadian English is distinctive in that it
    raises the first part of the diphthongs aj
    and aw.
  • In both cases, a ?

aj ? aw ?
  • This is raising because a low vowel becomes a
    mid vowel.
  • Technical term Canadian Raising.

11
Canadian Raising
  • Canadian Raising only occurs in certain sound
    environments
  • house loud
  • write ride
  • pipe bribe
  • like
  • Q When does Canadian Raising occur?
  • (what is the relevant sound environment?)
  • A aj and aw raise whenever they appear
    before a voiceless consonant.

12
Another Pattern
  • Heres one that weve seen before
  • phæt pat spæt spat
  • thap top stap stop
  • khar car skar scar
  • Voiceless stops are aspirated when they appear
    at the start of a stressed syllable.
  • Unless they appear immediately after s s___
  • Because aspirated and unaspirated stops dont
    appear in the same phonetic environment in
    English.
  • They are not contrastive sounds.

13
However
  • In languages like Quechua, there are meaningful
    contrasts between aspirated and unaspirated stops
    and affricates.
  • Some minimal pairs

14
Different Levels
  • In all languages, there are sounds which
    contrast.
  • They make meaningful differences between words.
  • phonemes
  • Phonemes also have variants which do not
    contrast.
  • but reliably appear in particular phonetic
    environments.
  • allophones
  • Phonemes represent abstract, psychological
    reality
  • broad transcriptions
  • allophones represent concrete, physical reality.
  • narrow transcriptions

15
Big Picture Flashback
  • Knowing how the broad level of transcription
    relates to the narrow level of transcription is
    part of what you know as a competent speaker of a
    language.
  • knowing which allophone to use for a
    particular phoneme, in some particular
    circumstance.
  • Another word for this knowledge is phonology.
  • This is subconscious knowledge
  • This knowledge takes the form of rules
  • For that reason, it can apply to new, creative
    forms.
  • Try, for example, nonsense words like mowch or
    skype.

16
Example Rule
  • In Japanese, s and are allophones of the
    same phoneme.

Phoneme /s/ Allophones s
  • Observations
  • appears only in front of /i/
  • s appears everywhere else
  • Rule /s/ surfaces as in front of /i/
  • Speakers of Japanese know this rule

17
Phonological Rules, formalized
  • Phonological rules can be written in the
    following form
  • /Phoneme/ ? Allophone / Environment
  • The environment is where we see the phonological
    transformation taking place.
  • Usually, the phonetic environment consists of
    the sounds surrounding the phoneme in question.
  • Example rule (Japanese)
  • /s/ ? / __ i
  • (__ i before an i)

18
Distributions
  • Question
  • How do we know that the /s/ changes to an in
    Japanese, and not the other way around?
  • We have to take into consideration the
    distribution of the two sounds.
  • The distribution is the set of phonetic
    environments in which a sound appears.
  • Two kinds of distributions
  • contrastive
  • complementary

19
Contrastive Distribution
  • Two sounds are in contrastive distribution when
    they can both appear in the same phonetic
    environment.
  • Sounds that change the meaning of words in a
    minimal pair are in contrastive distribution.
  • (Because they contrast with each other)
  • Example
  • bit vs. pit bIt vs. phIt
  • ? b and ph belong to different phonemes
  • Note the distribution
  • the sounds surrounding b and ph in this
    example are exactly the same.

20
Complementary Distribution
  • When sounds are in complementary distribution,
    they never appear in the same phonetic
    environment.

21
Complementary Distribution
  • When sounds are in complementary distribution,
    they never appear in the same phonetic
    environment.

all possible phonetic environments
sound 1 appears in these environments
sound 2 appears in these environments
22
Complementary Distribution
  • When sounds are in complementary distribution,
    they never appear in the same phonetic
    environment.

all possible phonetic environments
there is no overlap in where the two sounds appear
23
Examples
  • s and are in complementary distribution
    in Japanese
  • appears before the vowel i
  • s never appears before i, but it appears
    most everywhere else
  • th and t are in complementary distribution
    in English
  • t appears after the consonant s, and at the
    end of syllables
  • th appears at the beginning of stressed
    syllables, but never after s
  • Sounds that are in complementary distribution
    are generally allophones of the same phoneme

24
Types of Allophones
  • A restricted allophone is one that appears in
    only a limited set of phonetic environments.
  • in Japanese (only before i)
  • t in English (only after s)
  • A basic allophone is one that appears in a less
    restricted set of environments.
  • The basic allophone is also supposed to
    represent the phoneme in speakers heads.
  • s in Japanese (phoneme /s/)

25
More Japanese Words
  • What is the distribution of h, ç and f in
    the following Japanese words?
  • (ç is a voiceless palatal fricative)
  • çito person haha mother
  • çifu skin asaçi morning sun
  • heta awkward fune ship
  • hon book ha?i chopsticks
  • fuhenfuto neutrality
  • Q Are they in complementary or contrastive
    distribution?

26
Some Rules
  • In Japanese,
  • h appears before a, o, and e
  • f appears before u
  • ç appears before i
  • Q Which is the basic allophone, and which are
    restricted?
  • h is the basic allophone f and ç are the
    derived allophones.
  • Two phonological rules account for the
    distribution
  • /h/ ? f / ___ u
  • /h/ ? ç / ___ i

27
(No Transcript)
28
English Consonant Chart
29
Complete IPA Chart
30
(No Transcript)
31
Patterns
  • Sometimes, the rules for one phonemes
    distribution are identical to the rules for
    another phonemes distribution.
  • /t/ ? t / after s
  • /t/ ? th / at the beginning of stressed
    syllables
  • thap top stap stop
  • /p/ ? p / after s
  • /p/ ? ph / at the beginning of stressed
    syllables
  • phæt pat spæt spat
  • /k/ ? k / after s
  • /k/ ? kh / at the beginning of stressed
    syllables
  • kh?r care sk?r scare

32
Natural Classes
  • The same rules apply to /p/, /t/ and /k/. Why?
  • /p/, /t/ and /k/ form a natural class of sounds
    in English.
  • They are all voiceless stops
  • No other sound in English is a voiceless stop
  • A natural class is set of sounds in a language
    that
  • share one or more phonetic features
  • to the exclusion of all other sounds in that
    language.
  • The phonetic features that characterize
    natural classes are generally the phonetic labels
    weve already learned.
  • (velar, voiceless, high, tense, round, fricative,
    etc.)

33
Natural Class Examples
  • Examples of natural classes
  • k and g form the natural class of oral,
    velar stops
  • u and o form the natural class of rounded,
    tense vowels
  • What natural classes are formed by the following
    groups of sounds?
  • v, ð, z, ?
  • t, d
  • i, ?, u, ?

34
Features
  • There are two phonetic features we need to add to
    our list
  • Obstruent
  • includes stops, fricatives and affricates
  • these sounds obstruct the flow of air in the
    mouth
  • Sonorant
  • includes vowels, glides, liquids, nasals
  • these sounds resonate when theyre produced

35
More Patterns
  • Recall that the prefix /in-/ exhibited
    allomorphy.
  • The shape of this morpheme changed, depending on
    what it attached to.
  • Examples
  • /in-/ accurate ? inaccurate
  • /in-/ tolerant ? intolerant
  • /in-/ possible ? impossible
  • /in-/ mobile ? immobile
  • /in-/ coherent ? i?coherent

36
More Unnecessary Rules
  • In order to account for the allomorphy of /in-/,
    we might propose the following rules
  • /n/ ? m / ___ p
  • /n/ ? m / ___ m
  • /n/ ? ? / ___ k
  • What do all of these rules have in common?
  • What change is made?
  • What relationship does it have to the phonetic
    environment?

37
Place Assimilation
  • A new rule
  • the place of articulation of /n/ becomes
    identical to the place of articulation of a
    following stop.
  • If the following stop is bilabial, the /n/
    becomes a bilabial m
  • If the following stop is velar, the /n/ becomes
    a velar ?
  • Assimilation a type of phonological change in
    which one sound becomes more like another
  • Place Assimilation the place of articulation of
    one sound becomes identical to that of another
    sound
  • Moral make phonological rules as general as
    possible.

38
(No Transcript)
39
Mid-term rooms
  • ENC 033 and ENC 123.

40
Modern-day Shibboleths
  • Can I get a volunteer from the audience?

41
English Non-Contrasts
  • English voiceless stops are often aspirated.
  • Voiceless stops include p, t, k
  • Aspiration puff of air escapes from the mouth,
    after each stop
  • A timing issue with closing the glottis
  • Aspiration is symbolized with a superscript h
  • For instance
  • thap top
  • phæt pat
  • kh?r care

42
Broad - Narrow Examples
  • English /t/
  • Word Broad Narrow Description
  • top /tap/ thap aspirated
  • stop /stap/ stap unaspirated
  • batter /bætr/ bæ?r? flapped
  • kitten /k?tn/ kh??n? glottalized
  • nitrate /na?tre?t/ na?t?re?t palatalized

43
Broad vs. Narrow
  • Remember the IPA is an alphabet for all
    languages
  • It therefore includes symbols for sounds which
    are contrastive in any given language.
  • Alternatives broad vs. narrow transcriptions
  • Broad transcriptions
  • Only represent sounds which are contrastive in
    the language
  • Enclosed in slashes / /
  • Narrow transcriptions
  • Represent all sounds, whether or not they are
    contrastive
  • Enclosed in brackets

44
Different Levels
phoneme /t/ allophones th t ? ? t?
A phoneme is a set of meaningfully equivalent
speech sounds in a language. Different phonemes
make distinctions in meaning. Allophones (Gk
different sounds) are physically different
manifestations of a phoneme. Phonemes represent
abstract, psychological reality allophones
represent concrete, physical reality.
45
Grammar Schematic
  • Phonemic Form
  • phonological rules
  • Phonetic form

46
Further Examples
  • Different /t/ allophones and their
    distributions
  • t appears after the consonant s and at the
    end of syllables
  • ? appears at the end of stressed syllables,
    before l, r and m
  • ? appears at the end of stressed syllables,
    before n
  • t? appears at the beginning of syllables,
    before r
  • th appears at the beginning of syllables
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