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PHONEMIC ANALYSIS.

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Presentation on theme: "PHONEMIC ANALYSIS."— Presentation transcript:

1 PHONEMIC ANALYSIS

2 General assumption: Speech is composed of phonemes
Whenever a speech sound is produced, it is possible to identify which phoneme the sound in question belongs to. Still, there are various problems!

3 AFFRICATES Phonetically, they are composed of a plosive + fricative
But, it is possible to treat each affricate as a single consonant phoneme (one-phoneme analysis) They can also be treated as composed of two phonemes each, all of which are established as independent phonemes in English (two-phoneme analysis)

4 /t∫з:t∫/ & /dζλdζ/ In the first case they would be considered as consisting of 3 phonemes, in the second case of 5 phonemes Which analysis is preferable? In the 2-phoneme analysis (no separtion of affricates) the total number of phonemes is smaller and should be preferred as more economical (the most efficient codes do not use unnecessary symbols)

5 Still, 1-phoneme analysis is generally chosen by phonologists as preferable The arguments for: 1. Phonetic/allophonic argument: phonetic quality of /t/ and /∫/ in /t∫/ and /dζ/ is different from realisations of the sounds mentioned found elsewhere, e.g. Different quality of /t/ in “watch apes” vs. “what shapes” - still, this argument is weak

6 2. Distribution The proposed phonemes have distributions similar to other consonants, while other combinations of plosive+ fricative do not: /t∫/ and /dζ/ are found initially, medially and finally while no other combination has such a wide distribution. However, there are several consonants in English accepted as phonemes in spite of not being free to occur in all positions (think of r, w, j, h, ζ, ŋ/

7 3. Combining with other cons.
Free combining to form clusters would support the 1-phoneme analysis Initially they never occur in clusters Finally, they can be followed by t,d and preceded by l, n Another combination: pre-final l,n can occur with post-final t,d: e.g. squelched, hindged So, /t∫/ and /dζ/ do not combine freely to form clusters, particularly not initially

8 Two-phoneme analysis Initial /t∫/ and /dζ/ would have to be interpreted as initial t,d + post-initial ∫,ζ (besides l,r,w,j) which can combine with t,d, only

9 4. Intuition of the native speaker
Rather difficult to discover what native speakers (if untrained in phonetics and phonology) think or feel

10 Other problems: Sounds transcribed as hw, hj
Velar nasal ŋ (should it be treated as a separate phoneme or an allophone of the phoneme n occurring before g)

11 The English vowel system
Treating all long vowels and diphthongs as composed of two vowel phonemes: e.g. long vowels can be seen as containing short vowels twice, triphthongs would be composed of a basic vowel + one of ι,υ + ə (which makes three phonemes altogether)

12 Another way of treating long vowels and diphthongs
As composed of a vowel + a consonant (j, w, h, r), e.g. /eı/ - /ej/, /әυ/ - /әw/, /υә/ - /υh/, /i:/ - /ıj/. /a:/ - /ah/, /u:/ - /uw/ Thus, inequality of distribution is corrected for consonants that do not otherwise occur finally in a syllable.

13 More about long vowels Remember NEUTRALISATION of /i:/ and /ı/ to /i/; i.e. Cases where contrasts between phonemes which exist in other places disappear in certain contexts

14 Syllabic consonants A possibility is to add new cons. Phonemes to the existing list: syllabic l,r,n as in bottle, button, Hungary

15 Clusters of s + plosive P, t, k in syllable initial position are aspirated, but when preceded by s they become unaspirated and could perhaps be transcribed as b, d, g because contrast between these two groups of consonants become neutralised in this context

16 Schwa /ә/ /ә/ can be treated as an allophone of several vowels, not only of /λ/ in unstressed syllables, e.g. Economy vs. economic German vs. Germanic

17 DISTICTIVE FEATURES Distinctive feature analysis is one of many different ways of treating the notion of phoneme. The principle: phonemes are not minimum, independent, indivisible units but combinations of different features. In a table showing presence or absence of features in different consonants there would be no phonemes with the same combination of +s and –s; otherwise, they could not be treated as different phonemes

18 Thank you!


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