Phonological rules
REPORTER: JUSTINE FAITH C. ARCEÑO
MAT – ENGLISH
Phonological rules describe how phonemes are realized as their
allophones in a given environment.
Phonological rules start with the underlying representation of a
sound (the phoneme that is stored in the speaker's mind) and
yield the final surface form, or what the speaker actually
pronounces. For example, the English plural -s may be
pronounced as[s] (in "cats"),[z] (in "cabs"), or as [ iz] (in
"buses")
Police Hamster
Please Hampster
Deletion
Deletion
When a sound, such as a stressless syllable or a
weak consonant, is not pronounced;
for example, most American English speakers do not
pronounce the
[d] in "handbag",
[n] in "condemn",
[k] in " know" (6).
So, it is a process by which a sound present
in the phonemic form is removed from the
phonetic form in certain environments
forease of production (3).
Lass (1984:186) • APHAERESIS
suggests that there are • SYNCOPE
three types of
• APOCOPE
deletion:
Aphaeresis
In phonetics and phonology, aphaeresis is the loss of one or
more sounds from the beginning of a word, especially the
loss of an unstressed vowel.
I am --- I'm
I have ----I 've
know and knight
Syncope
In phonology, syncope is the loss of one or more
sounds from the interior of a word, especially the
loss of an unstressed vowel.
Syncope
formative internal deletion: the term is most frequently used
with vowel loss, but some writers extend it to consonants as
well.
This can be seen in American and British forms of
certain words:
/sɛkrɪtɛri/ vs. /sɛkrɪtrɪ/
'secretary',
' sign ', assign.
Apocope
In phonology, apocope is the loss (elision) of one
or more sounds from the end of a word,
especially the loss of an unstressed vowel.
Apocope
the loss of a final element as /t/ before a
word beginning with another consonant, '
last time, also low stress words may loss
their finals as in 'and', 'of'.
Insertion
Insertion
Nathan (2008) asserts that not only can segments be
deleted, sometimes they can be inserted instead.
There seems to be two basic reasons for insertion:
1. preventing clusters of consonants that violate
syllable structure constraints in the language,
2. and easing transitions between segments that have
multiple incompatibilities.
Insertion at the beginning is observed in Spanish,
where the language does not permit onset clusters.
Words that are inherited from Latin with such
clusters changed to have an initial /e/ inserted:
especial [espesial] ‘special’
estudiante [estudiante] ‘student’
escuela [eskwela] ‘school’
‘intrusive/linking r’
British and some dialects of [American English].
In these dialects a historical /r/ has been deleted in
word-final coda position, but when the word is followed
by vowel initial words under complex and not-
completely understood circumstances, the /r/ reappears,
an example of ‘intrusive r’ is:
idea [aIˈdiə]
idea is [aIdiərIz]
Metathesis
Phonological process that changes the order of phonemes
Old English vs. Contemporary English
asterix(ks) asterisk
comfterble comfortable
intregal integral
relator realtor
revelant relevant (7)
Lass (1984: 188) states that in old English there are interchanges of /p/ and /s/ ,
as shown in spelling variants: /ps/ --- /sp/ in waspe 'wasp' , /sp/---/ps/ in apse aspe
'aspen' , cosp cops 'cope' , wlips 'lisping'. He adds that the metathesized forms wasp,
copse are now standard. Another metathesis involves nasal sequences, specially /m/
and
/n/: emnity for enmity, anemone for amenone.
Functions of Phonological Rules
Phonological rules have a number of functions, among them are the following:
1. Change feature values.
2. Add new features (distinctive / non distinctive): aspiration in English.
3. Delete segments: contraction rules in English.
4. Add segments (schwa insertion in plural and past tense)
5. Reorder segments (metathesis: sk to [ks]).
6. Phonological rules often refer to entire classes of sounds rather than to the
individual sounds(8).
7. Phonological rules are generated to account for what occurs in a language, they are not originally used to describe
children's and disordered speech however, they have been applied to describe children's and disordered speech (11).
Phonological rules vary between languages and dialects, and
they reflect the common pronunciation habits of various
linguistic groups.