mardi 9 juin 2015

Data Pattern #1 – Minimal Pairs

Based on definition: Phomemes are contrastive.
When you have two or more sounds, found in identical 
environments, (transcribed identically except for one sound) that 
mean different things.
Example:
[bij] ‘bee’   [phij] ‘pea’/‘pee’
The sounds [b] and [ph] contrast in minimal pairs and thus belong 
to separate phonemes.
[suw] ‘sue’    [zuw]  ‘zoo’
The sounds [s] and [z] contrast in minimal pairs and thus belong to 
separate phonemes.

Data Pattern #2 –
Complementary Distribution, cont.


Some General Enviornments
 & Notations:
1. Word boundaries 
¡word initial   #_____
¡word final    ______#
2. Before certain sounds; before sound classes
¡___i, ____s, ____ N, ___ palatals, ___C, ___V
3. After certain sounds; after sound classes
¡i ___, s ____, N ____, palatals ___, C___, V___
4. Between certain sounds; sound classes

¡i____i, s____s, N___N, pal.___pal., C__C, V__V


Data Pattern #2 – 

Complementary Distribution, cont.



Example: Spanish
[dexo]    ‘finger’
[donde]  ‘where’ 
[naxa]  ‘nothing’
[pixe]   ‘3p sing. asks’
[pwexe]  ‘3p sing. can’ 
[pared]   ‘wall’
[r]= flap (symbol won’t show)
Also, [d] = dental
Note that phones are phonetically similar
¡Both dental (dental vs. interdental)
¡Both voiced



[d] occurs in:  elsewhere
  #___e
  #___o
  n___e
  e___#
[x] e___o  V___V
  a___a
  i___e
  e__e
 
The phones [d] and [x]  are found in 
complementary distribution and thus belong to
 the same phoneme. [d] and [x] are allophones of the same phoneme /d/.
/d/
[x]  V_V
[d] elsewhere



Data Pattern #3 – 

Analogous Environments


Based on definition: Phomemes are contrastive.
This pattern is when you find two sounds in 
nearly the same environments, but do not have 
data for a minimal pair.  The appearance of these 
two sounds does not seem to be conditioned by 
any specific phonetic environments, because 
they both occur in analogous environments.


Data Pattern #3 –
Analagous Environments, cont.

lExample:




Environment of [s]  Environment of 
#___a  #____a
i___a  i_____a
  i_____a
These phones are found in analogous 
environments and thus belong 
to different phonemes. These sounds are 
allophones of different 
phonemes.




Data Pattern #4 –
Free Variation


Based on definition: Phomemes are realized by allophones
This pattern is when you find two sounds in the same environments, and there does not seem to be a change in meaning. In other words, it appears that the phones can interchange with one another with no effect in meaning.  This is usually a result of phonetic distinction that you perceive that is not contrastive in this language.


Data Pattern #4 –
Free Variation, cont.

Example: English



Both of these phones are found in identical 
environments, and yet, unlike the analogous 
environments examples, alternation of these 
phones does NOT create differences in meaning.
Thus, both the [p] and the [p] (unreleased) 
are allophones of, and thus belong to, the 
same phoneme.


To summarize…


To show you have allophones of the same phoneme:
1.Complementary Distribution
¡phones occur in unique, separate, 
individual environments
¡environment of sounds conditions 
allophone
2.Free Variation
¡Phones occur in the exact same 
environments or near-identical 
environments but don’t change 
meaning
¡Seem to be used interchangeably, or 
substitute for one another,
are realized as allophones.
Phonemes


To show you have allophones of different phonemes:
1.Minimal Pairs
¡sounds occur in exactly the same 
environments – in an IDENTICAL set 

- AND changes meaning of words
¡
2.Analogous Environments

¡Phones occur in overlapping 
environments, and in near-identical 
environments, but word meanings are
 different
Phonemes are contrastive.

Hardman’s Definition of the Phoneme

Negative Definition /Contrastive Definition

Phonemes act to keep words separate.
Phonemes make words contrast.

A Phoneme is what it is because it is not something else.

Positive Definition/ Realization Definition

Phonemes are built up of a range of phones that trigger our perception.
This definition accounts for physical realization of phonemes.
Speech organs builds sounds which trigger phonemes.


Structural Definition

Phonemes build the structure of language and are part of the whole
 phonological structure of a language.
Humans have propensity for symmetry in language.
There is a linguistic tendency to make use of some phonetic 
possibilities to make contrasts and to use them consistently.

Analyzing Data to Determine Phonemes

There are four general patterns you will find in your data that help you to determine phonemic status.
With extensive data sets, there is a fifth pattern that also appears.

These patterns are built around the definitions of the phoneme itself.


Analyzing Data to Determine Phonemes

You analyze phonetic data to determine phonemic status.
Phonemic status means how native speakers perceive these 
sounds, and thus, how these sounds are organized in this language.
lDo native speakers “hear” a difference and use them 
contrastively? (allophones of different phonemes – these sounds 
belong to different phonemes)

lDo native speakers not “hear” a difference and thus do not use 
them contrastively? (allophones of the same phoneme – these 
sounds belong to the same phoneme)

So remember, 2 languages might make use of the same 
sounds [e] and [i], but organize and perceive those sounds 
differently.

Language A: /e/  /i/  language B:  /i/
      [e]           [i]  [e]
  [i]

A: 2 sounds belong to different phonemes, native speakers 
perceive them as different and they can be used to build 
differences in words, [e] and [i] belong to different 
phonemes, /e/ and /i/, respectively

B: 2 sounds belong to the same phoneme, native speakers 
do NOT perceive them as different, they may not be used to 
build differences in words, [e] and [i] belong to the same 
phoneme, /i/


That is your goal in phonemic analysis –
to determine the perception
and organization of sound
by a native speaker.


Phonemics

Phonemics, or Why Phonetic is so hard…
You do not hear physical sound directly.
If you did, phonetics would be easy.

Instead, you perceive all speech sounds through the sound system of your native language(s) and the languages you have studied.

What does
that mean?
You perceive speech sounds through structure.
When you deal with sound outside of the structure you are used to, it can become confusing and difficult to even perceive a sound.
When you hear human speech sounds, these sounds automatically “trigger” perceptual units in your brain/mind.
These units are abstractions and are used to organize and structure the “sounds” of your native language.

The phoneme is the basic unit of organization of sounds in language.
The phoneme is an abstract, structural and perceptual unit of speech.


To put another way, when
 someone utters a physical 
speech sound to you, that 
speech sound triggers a 

phoneme in your mind – you 

do not “hear” the phonetic 
distinctions directly. 
Instead, the sound triggers a perceptual unit and you
 perceive the sound as that unit.



When native speakers (without formal linguistics 
training) say they “hear no difference” between two 
sounds, it is probably because in their language 
those two sounds trigger the same perceptual unit.
Those two sounds belong to the same phoneme.


You will generally not “hear” a difference between two sounds that belong to the same phoneme.
You will generally “hear” a difference between two sounds who belong to different phonemes.

Phonemes are used to build words and contrast “sound unit” from “sound unit.”

Classic English Phoneme Example




Key Vocabulary in Phonemics

lPhoneme – abstract structural and perceptual unit /     /
lPhone – phonetic speech sound, unanalyzed according to 
phonemic status
  [ ]
lAllophone – after analyzing data, the phonetic speech 
sound that belongs to, and thus triggers, a phoneme

 [  ]  under /  /

Writing phonemes and the allophones that realize them:
/ / phoneme (choose one allophone as symbol)
  [ ] Allophone 1
  [  ] Allophone 2    etc.
Generally, when there is more than one allophone, each will occur in its own environment – if that  is the case, list environment, too

Analyzing Data to Determine Phonemes
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