Title: Principles of Linguistics
1Principles of Linguistics
Chapter 7 Supplement
- Phonology Pronunciation
- The Sound Patterns of English
- Understanding Some of the More Complex Patterns
of English
Dr. Robert Schwab, 2007
2Sonorant Consonants and Obstrents Consonants
- Sonorant Consonants and Obstrents Consonants
- Sonorant consonants that are produced with little
or no obstruction or constriction of the airflow.
All vowels are sonorant. Sonorant consonants
include the nasals (m,n and N), the liquids (l
and r), and the glides (w and y). - Obstrent consonants are sounds that are produced
with obstruction or constriction of the airflow.
Obstrent consonants include the 3 major classes
of consonants the stops (pen tin kin big
dig get), the fricatives (van fan this
think zoo beige ship hat) and the affricates
(joke choke ).
3What is a Syllable?
- A Syllable is a unit of connected sounds that
contains a peak of sonorance (a vowel or
diphthong) and any less sonorant consonant sounds
within the same structure - All syllables contain a peak of sonorance which
forms the functional center or nucleus of the
syllable - A syllable may contain an onset consisting of one
or more consonant sounds that occurs before the
nucleus. - A syllable may contain a coda consisting of one
or more consonant sounds that occurs after the
nucleus. - The combination of the nucleus and coda is called
the rhyme. The rhyme controls vowel length,
vowel sonorance, and syllable boundary formation
4Syllable Structure
- The vowel sound and everything that follows in a
syllable is referred to as the rhyme. The vowel
sound itself is referred to as the nucleus, and a
syllabic segments that follow the vowel sound is
called the coda. Syllabic segments that come
before the vowel sound are referred to as the
onset - syllable
-
rhyme - Onset nucleus
coda - spr.i..nt
5Consonant Clusters Combinations and the Sonorance
Pyramid
- The ability of English onsets to contain 1,2 or 3
consonants, and codas to contain 1, 2, 3, or 4
consonants allow for literally thousands of
potential combinations, but most of these
possible combinations are never used. - Consonant combinations do not occur randomly
they reliably pattern based on sonorance, which
is itself based on manner of articulation. - In English, these consonants pattern in a way
that always places members of the more sonorant
class closer to the nucleus than less sonorant
sounds.
6- Vowels are the most sonorant class of sounds.
Within the class of vowels, tense vowels are more
sonorant and lax vowels are less sonorant. On a
full-range sonorance scale, tense vowels receive
a sonorance level of (7) and lax vowels receive a
sonorance level of (6) - Consonants can be classified based on sonorance.
Classification of consonantal sonorance is based
on manner of articulation. The Sonorant
consonants (glides, liquids and nasals) are the
most sonorant group of consonants, and receive a
sonorance level of (5). Released stops are the
2nd most sonorant group of consonants, and
receive a sonorance level of (4). Affricates are
the 3rd most sonorant group of consonants, and
receive a sonorance level of (3). Fricatives are
4th most sonorant group of consonants, and
receive a sonorance level of (2). Unreleased
stops are the least sonorant group of consonants,
and receive a sonorance level of (1). Unreleased
stops only occur in syllable final position in
the coda.
7Consonants and the Sonorance Scale
- (7) Tense vowels
- (6) Lax vowels
- (5) Sonorant consonants (glides, liquids,
nasals) - (4) Released stops
- (3) Affricates
- (2) Fricatives
- (1) Unreleased stops
- The Sonorance Pyramid
- 2 4 6 4 4 2 2 4 5 7 4 2 2 4 5
6 5 3 2 - s k à r t s s k w k s s k r à n tS t
- (skirts) (squawks)
(scrunched)
8Onset Adaptation Borrowed Words
- If a word does not follow our rules for consonant
cluster formation, we will modify it so it does.
Many Greek words begin with ps and pt
(psychology, pterodactyl, etc). when these
combinations are imported into English, we modify
them by omitting the obtrusive sound. - Each language has its own rules for controling
this process. This is why Korean learners will
often add a phantom vowel between segments -
to break up the obtrusive combination, creating
an extra vowel (/kriym/, street - /sta-riyt/).
It is also why speakers of European languages
will often add a phantom vowel in front of the
obtrusive combination, creating an extra vowel
(/Es-piyk/, student - /Es-tuwdnt/ and Spanish -
/Es-----pQnIS/).
9Syllable Boundaries Based on Sonorance
- The syllable is based on a scale of rising and
falling sonority (rising in the onset and falling
in the coda). Consonant order in an onset or coda
is dependent on maintaining the sequential order
of the sonorance pyramid. A break or disruption
in the ordered sequence of will result in a
syllable break. - There are a two relationships that mediate this
relationship - two consonants from the same sonorance class can
not occur in the same onset or coda, - two obstruents cannot occur together sequentially
(there is one exception the initial /s/ on the
three consonant onset as in split this is
extrasyllabic form, a unique feature found only
in a few Indo-European languages). - With these two exceptions we can now predict
syllable boundaries--the syllable begins with the
least sonorous segment in a string.
10Consonantal Influence on Syllable Stress
- Stress is the prominence of one or more syllabic
elements over others in a word. The structure of
individual syllables plays controls the syllable
that will be stressed - Necessary terms and definitions
- Diphthong a nucleus that contains two vowel
sounds - Closed Syllable contains both an onset and a
coda - Heavy Syllable contains a closed syllable or a
dipthong - Penultimate Syllable the next-to-the-last
syllable in a word
11Syllable Stress for 2 syllable words
- For this introduction, we will focus on
multi-syllable content words in English. - For 2 syllable words, the stress will fall on
- the 1st syllable if it is functioning as a noun
- key.board, im.plant, pr.esent, re.bate,
part.y, hor.mone - The 2nd syllable if it is functioning as a verb
- re.act, im.plant, pre.sent, a.dopt, cre.ate,
- Unless the second syllable is a grammatical
morpheme - in which the 1st syllable is stressed -
lift.ed, end.ed,
12Syllable Stress for 3 syllable words
- For 3 or more syllable nouns, the stress falls on
- the penultimate syllable when it is heavy
- if the penultimate syllable is not heavy,
- the stress falls on the antepenultimate syllable
that demonstrates the greatest degree of heavy
features - Consider a.gen.da, a.ppen.dix (penultimate
stress) and cin.em.a, cab.in.et, A.mer.i.ca,
in.ter.o.gate (nonpenultimate stress) - un.re.lat.ed com.put.er aut.o.mo.bile
Kor.e.a
13THE END Principles of LinguisticsChapter 7
SupplementPhonology PronunciationThe Sound
Patterns of LanguageUnderstanding Some of the
more Complex Patterns of EnglishDr. Robert
Schwab, 2007