Phonology Key Vocabulary Flashcards

1
Q

Sonority Sequencing Principle

A

Claims that sounds preceding the nucleus must rise in sonority, and sounds following the nucleus must fall in sonority

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2
Q

Maximal Onset Principle

A

Given a sequence of consonants and vowels, syllabification proceeds in such a way that as many consonants as possible end up in an onset, even if the language allows codas. Only if we do not have a choice, do we resort to syllabifying consonants in a coda

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3
Q

Sonority

A

Technical term for the category that captures our acoustic impression of ‘clear audibility’

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4
Q

Syllabification

A

How consonants are distributed among syllables. It is assigning syllable structure to words

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5
Q

Vowel epenthesis

A

Technical term for the insertion of vowels into syllables

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6
Q

Coda

A

The postvocalic slot (can be filled by one or more consonants; is not obligatory)

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7
Q

Onset

A

The prevocalic slot (can be filled by one or more consonants; is not obligatory)

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8
Q

Nucleus

A

“Slot for a vowel” of the syllable. In English the nucleus can be filled by a vowel, a diphthong, or a syllabic consonant

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9
Q

Constituents

A

The elements that make up a syllable are termed constituents (e.g. ‘slots for vowels’; ‘slots for consonants’)

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10
Q

Syllabic consonants

A

Consonants which occupy the central part of the syllable

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11
Q

Non-rhotic

A

R-sounds that do not seem to occur in word-final position

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12
Q

Rhotic

A

R-sounds that can occur in word-final position

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13
Q

Flapping

A

A process in which /t/ and /d/ can be realized as [ſ] because the phonemic contrast is neutralized in intervocalic position

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14
Q

Final devoicing

A

When a voiced phoneme has a voiceless allophone in the word-final position

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15
Q

Neutralisation

A

When a contrast between different phonemes can be neutralized. Refers to the fact that in a particular context, a contrast between phonemes becomes invisible

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16
Q

Free variation

A

The distribution of [p] and [p˺]. Speakers can choose which allophone they use.

17
Q

Minimal pairs

A

A pair of words which differ in only one sound, but differ in meaning (e.g. “wrap”, “map”)

18
Q

Complementary distribution

A

Two sounds which are distributed in such a way that one can only occur where the other cannot

19
Q

Phone

A

A physical realization of a speech sound like the voiceless or the voiced alveolar approximant

20
Q

Allophones

A

Phones which function as alternant realizations of the same phoneme

21
Q

Spectrogram

A

A graphic representation of the frequency distribution of the complex jumble or sound waves that give the hearing impression of speech sounds

22
Q

Phonology

A

The study of abstract categories that organize the sound system of a language. There abstract categories comprise individual speech sounds as well as the way in which speech sounds are grouped into larger phonological units, such as syllables and words

23
Q

Velarized realisation (dark 1)

A

The third realization of /l/ is what is called verlarised realization of /l/ (also termed dark 1)

24
Q

Clear 1

A

The non-velarized realization /l/

25
Q

Distribution

A

Refers to the different positions in which a speech sound can occur or cannot occur in the words of a language