A01_RICH4603_04_SE_A01.QXD

(Chris Devlin) #1
then try to build up the sound of a new or unfamiliar word by saying it one
sound at a time.
see alsoalphabetic method

phonological componentn
see generative theory


phonological rulen
see generative phonology


phonologyn phonologicaladj
1 another term for phonemics.
2 (for some linguists) a cover term for bothphonetics and phonemics.
3 the establishment and description of the distinctive sound units of a
language (phonemes) by means of distinctive features.
Each phoneme is considered as consisting of a group of these features and
differing in at least one feature from the other phonemes, e.g.
/ip//up/
+high ++high



  • low -low

  • back +back

  • round +round
    where the features +or -high, +or -low, +or -backrefer to the position
    of the tongue in the mouth and +or -roundto whether the lips are rounded
    or not.
    Phonology is also concerned with:
    athe study of word-to-word relations in sentences; that is, how sound
    patterns are affected by the combination of words. For example, /giv/
    give and / him/ him may combine to /givim/ give him.
    bthe investigation of intonation patterns.
    see also boundaries, generative phonology, suprasegmental


phonotacticsn phonotactic adj
(in phonology) the arrangements of the distinctive sound units (phonemes)
in a language.
For example, in English, the consonant groups (consonant clusters)
/spr/ and /str/ can occur at the beginning of a word, as in sprout,strain, but
they cannot occur at the end of a word. A description of the phonotactics of
English consonant clusters would include this information.


phrasal-prepositional verbn
see phrasal verb


phrasal-prepositional verb
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