Introducing PhonologyHutchinson, 1984 - 326 pages |
Contents
Preface | 7 |
Phonemic and phonetic | 15 |
Phonemes in sequence | 50 |
Copyright | |
11 other sections not shown
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Common terms and phrases
accents acoustic affricates allomorphs allophones alveolar approximant articulatory assimilation back vowels basis becomes cardinal vowel Chapter Chomsky and Halle complementary distribution consonant clusters contrast deletion derived dialects diphthongs distinction distinguish distribution English environment example Exercise fall-rise final French fricative front vowels full form glides glottal grammatical initial intonation Jakobson's labial language acquisition lexical items linguists loan-words long vowel manner of articulation marked meaning minimal pairs morphemes nasal nasal consonant native speaker neutralization non-standard normal notation nucleus obstruent occur palatal palato-alveolar patterns phonemic representation phonological pitch place of articulation plosive plural position possible preceding problem processes pronounced pronunciation realization rules reduced relationship rounded vowels segments sentence sequence similar Similarly single phoneme sonorant sound changes speech stress syllable-final symbol tone group unmarked unrounded variation velar verb voiced voiceless sounds vowel length vowel reduction word-initially words
References to this book
An Introduction to Phonetics and Phonology John Clark,Collin Yallop,Janet Fletcher No preview available - 2007 |