Allophones of the English phonemes 1 Allophones of /p


Syllables and Phonotactic constraints



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7.4. Syllables and Phonotactic constraints


Phonotactic rules determine which sounds are allowed or disallowed in each part of the syllable. English allows very complicated syllables; syllables may begin with up to three consonants (as in string or splash), and occasionally end with as many as four (as in prompts or sixths). There are languages that forbid empty onsets, Arabic "Omar", "Ali" and "Abdullah", among many others, actually begin with a glottal stop consonant /ʔ/.

8.4.1. Types of Syllabl es

This is the analysis of types of syllable that we have in English :

Syllable Examples

1- ( V ) I a

2- ( VC ) an at

3- ( VCC ) ask

4- ( VCCC ) pre – empts

5- ( CV ) no so

6- ( CVC ) can hat

7-(CVCC ) tent desk

8-( CVCCC) thanks sixth

9- ( CCVC ) speak green

10- ( CVCCCC ) tempts

11- ( CCV ) play sky

12- ( CCVCC ) snacks

13- ( CCVCCCC ) twelfths

14- ( CCVCCC ) stands twelfth

15 - ( CCCV ) spray

16- (CCCVC ) stream street

17- ( CCCVCC ) strange script

18- ( CCCVCCC ) strands

7.5. Syllabic consonants


Syllabic consonants occur frequently in some contexts and less frequently in others. Whilst in certain contexts syllabic consonants occur with very high frequency, it is not obligatory for this to happen. The frequency of use of syllabic consonants is speaker-dependent.

(i) Syllabic /n/ and /l/


Syllabic /n/ and /l/ occur, with very high frequency, after alveolar consonants at the end of words. The words below would therefore normally be transcribed without a schwa (/ə/). Note that in this kind of transcription (i.e. Broad) , it is not necessary to include a diacritic to indicate that the sonorant (i.e. /n/ or /l/) is syllabic:

/tn/ /bʌtnˌ/ button

/dn/ /sædnˌ/ sadden

/zn/ /dʌznˌ/ dozen

/tl/ /kætlˌ/ cattle

/dl/ /mɪdlˌ/ middle

/sl/ /kɑ:slˌ/ castle

/zl/ /mʌzlˌ/ muzzle

/nl/ /faɪnlˌ/ final
7.6. Comparison of Syllabic Structure of Arabic and English
The syllabic structures of Arabic and English, though basically quite similar, differ in some ways. In both languages the syllables are marked out by the relative prominence of the peaks. We can consider the syllabic systems of the two languages as syllable systems of the peak type. That is to say that there are as many syllables as there are peaks of prominence in these languages.

In both Arabic and English the syllable systems have syllable onsets and codas more or less of similar types, but differing in their structures.

Syllables with peaks only do not exist in Arabic, but they do in English. We may classify basically the syllable structure of both Arabic and English as follows:

English Arabic

C0-3 V C0-4 C1 V C0-2

1. V (zero onset and zero coda) (does not exist)

e.g., a (article)

2. VC (with zero onset) No syllable starts with V

e.g., out, in, end, awful, ooze

3. CV (with zero coda) CV (with zero coda)

e.g., tea, sea la ma ‘no water'

4.CVC (with onset and coda) CVC (with onset and coda)

e.g., pin, sun, man bar sir bur


In Arabic the nonzero onsets and codas syllable allows only one consonant in the onset and two successive consonants in the coda maximally, in contrast with English in which nonzero onsets include from one to three successive consonants and nonzero codas from one to four consonants. This area is of major difficulty for the Arab learners.

It should be noted that both languages have clusters, i.e., intervocalic consonants and consonant sequences in a micro segment. English is said to have final consonant cluster of one to four consonants. Arabic differs in this respect; it has final cluster of one to two consonants only. Across a word boundary where a word ends in four consonants coda and a following word begins with three consonant onset, a combination of seven consonants, though rare, is possible in English, e.g., The texts stretched over the theme. In Arabic, across word boundaries, a maximum of three consonants sequence is possible. Contrastively, the English consonants sequence will be a little difficult for the Arab learners and particularly those which are not similar to the final combinations of Arabic.


























































































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