Ch. 3 Vocab & Terms Flashcards
phonology
the study of the distribution of sounds in a language and the interactions between those different sounds
phonotactic consonants
restrictions on possible combinations of sounds
sound substitution
sounds that exist in a language a speaker knows are used to replace sounds that do not exist in that language when pronouncing the words of a foreign language
phoneme
a class of speech sounds that seem to be variants of the same sound
allophone
member of a particular phoneme class that corresponds to an actual phonetic segments produced by speaker
distribution
set of phonetic environments in which it occurs
contrastive distribution
two sounds occur in the same phonetic environment; using one rather than the other changes the meaning of the word
minimal pair
a pair of words whose pronunciations differ by exactly one sounds and that have different meanings
alternation
difference between two (or more) phonetic forms that you might otherwise expect to be related
complementary distribution
the occurrence of sounds in a language such that they are never found in the same phonetic environment
free variation
term used to refer to two sounds that occur in overlapping environments but cause no distinction in the meaning of their respective words
overlapping distribution
sounds that can occur in the same environment
phonological rules
allows him/her to translate phonemes into actual speech sounds; forms linguistic competence
underlying form
the phonemic form of a word or morpheme before phonological rules are applied
conditioning environment
neighboring sounds of a give sound that cause it to undergo a change
obstruents
produced with an obstruction of the airflow
sonorants
segments produced with a relatively open passage for the airflow
assimilation
cause a sound or gesture to become more like a neighboring sound or gesture with respect to some phonetic property
nasal placeassimilation
an alveolar nasal assimilates to the place of articulation of a following consonant
palatalization
refers to a special type of assimilation in which a consonant becomes like a neighboring palatal
vowel harmony
a back vowel becomes front when preceded by a front vowel in the same word
dissimilation
cause two close or adjacent sounds to become less similr with respect to some property, by means of a change in one or both sounds
manner of dissimilation
a stop becomes a fricative when followed by another stop
insertion
cause a segment not present at the phonemic level to be added to the phonetic form of a word