Phonology Flashcards

1
Q

What is brain lateralization?

A

Certain functions are located in different hemispheres of the brain.

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2
Q

Language is processed predominantly in:

A

The left hemisphere

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3
Q

What is Broca’s area responsible for?

A

The speech production

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4
Q

What is Wernicke’s area responsible for?

A

Speech comprehension

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5
Q

What language function could be taken care of by the right hemisphere?

A

Reading body language

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6
Q

When information is heard through the primary auditory cortex, where is it immediately sent for processing?

A

Wernicke’s area

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7
Q

When information is heard through the primary visual cortex, where is it immediately sent for processing?

A

The angular gyrus

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8
Q

How does the information that has been understood get from Wernicke’s area to where a reply will be formulated in Broca’s area?

A

via the arcuate fasciculus

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9
Q

They have some evidence that the Wernicke-Geschwind Model is a reasonably true model because of

A

Brain injuries

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10
Q

Noam Chomsky’s theory of Universal Grammar suggests that

A

language is innate in humans

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11
Q

What are phonemes?

A

Meaningful sounds in a specific language

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12
Q

6 concepts of phonological analysis

A

Contrastive
-Minimal Pairs
-Distinctive Features
Complementary
-Natural Classes
-Coarticulation Effects

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13
Q

What is co-articulation?

A

The process of making one sound almost at the
same time as the next sound.

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14
Q

Four types of Co-articulation effects:

A

Assimilation
Insertion
Elision
Weakening

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15
Q

When two sound segments occur in sequence and some aspects of
one segment is taken by the other = ?

A

Assimilation

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16
Q

when a sound is inserted = ?

A

Insertion

17
Q

not pronouncing a sound segment that would be present in the careful
pronunciation of a word in isolation = ?

A

Elision

18
Q

Example of weakening

A

Full vowels become schwa in function words (can vs can’t)

19
Q

Examples of Elision?

A

Consonant clusters (friendship -frenship, aspects-aspecs, we asked him - we astim)
Function words (is he busy - izzybizzy, take him away - takeimaway)

20
Q

Examples of Assimilation

A

voicing and devoicing (I have vs I hafta go)
palatalization caused by palatal glide (miʧju dɪʤju )

21
Q

Example of insertion?

A

voiceless stop inserted between nasal and fricative
(dance – t, strength – k, hamster – p)

22
Q

What is a distinctive feature?

A

A feature that, when changed, can create a minimal pair in a given
language.

23
Q

Three examples of distinctive features:

A

Aspiration ʰ
Nasalization ~
Vowel roundness / labialization

24
Q

Is aspiration a distinctive feature in English?

A

No, they don’t create minimal pairs.

25
Q

Is aspiration a distinctive feature in Indi?

A

Yes, creates minimal pairs.

26
Q

T or F: Nasalization is a distinctive feature in French.

A

Yes, but not in English

27
Q

What is the goal of phonological analysis?

A

to
determine if the sounds being
examined belong to the same
phoneme or to separate
phonemes.