Allophones of the English phonemes 1 Allophones of /p



Download 0.83 Mb.
Page6/17
Date08.05.2017
Size0.83 Mb.
#17593
1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   ...   17















Chapter 8: Assimilation

8.1. Assimilation

8.2. Types of assimilations

8.2.1. Regressive assimilation

8.2.2. Progressive assimilation

Exercises

8.1. Assimilation


The phonetic assimilation is a very frequent type of phonetic modification undergone by a sound in contact with its neighboring context, who tends to reduce the differences between the two. It consists of acquisition by a sound of one or more characteristics specific to its neighbor. Contrary, when two similar sounds in more or less direct contact move away one from the other, one speaks about dissimilation.

8.2. Types of assimilations

One distinguishes several types of phonetic assimilation, according to the position of the sounds influenced compared to the sound which influences.

9.2.1. Regressive assimilation

An assimilation is known as regressive by which the influenced sound is before the sound which influences it:

In continuous speech, alveolar consonants can assimilate to the place of articulation of a following consonant in certain contexts. This process is certainly not obligatory, but it is nevertheless sufficiently common that the rules should be known.

a) alveolar consonants can assimilate to a bilabial place of articulation before labials


/maɪppʊt/ might put

/maɪpbaɪ/ might buy

/maɪpmeɪk/ might make

/maɪpwɪn/ might win

/ʃʊbpʊt/ should put

/ʃʊbbaɪ/ should buy

/ʃʊbmeɪk/ should make

/ʃʊbwɪn/ should win

/siːmpiːtə/ seen Peter

/siːmbɪl/ seen Bill

/siːmmaɪk/ seen Mike

/siːmwɔːltə/ seen Walter

b) alveolar consonants can assimilate to a velar place of articulation before velar consonants



/maɪkkʌm/ might come

/maɪkɡəʊ/ might go

/ʃʊɡkʌm/ should come

/ʃʊɡɡəʊ/ should go

/siːŋkærən/ seen Karen

/siːŋɡreɡ/ seen Greg

c) alveolar fricatives can assimilate to a palato-alveolar place of articulation before /ʃ/ and /j/



/ðɪʃʃɒp/ this shop

/ðiːʒʃiːp/ these sheep

/ðɪʃjɪə/ this year

/telʒjuː/ tells you

When the following word is a function word, the /j/ may also be elided:



/ɪŋkeɪʃəniːdət/ in case you need it

/hæʒəletəkʌm/ has your letter come?

d) alveolar stops and a following /j/ may merge to form an affricate



/ʃʌtʃərɪez/ shut your eyes

/dɪdʒuː/ did you?

e) word-internal assimilation

The same processes of assimilation can also take place word-internally. Often this will be in compounds or words that are formed from a root+affix eg.:

/ɡʊbbɑɪ/ good-bye

/tæbpəʊl/ Tadpole

/ʌmmʉːvd/ Unmoved

/hɔːʃʃuː/ horse-shoe

Progressive assimilation


An assimilation is known as progressive by which the influenced sound is after the sound which influences it:

Examples????????????

(iv) Consonant deletion


/t/ and /d/ are particularly prone to deletion when they occur between two consonants. Some examples are given below:

  Full Form   Deleted Stop  

/əmendz/ /əmenz/ amends

/hændfʊl/ /hænfʊl/ handful

/daɪrektli/ /dərekli/ directly

/ɪnvestmənt/ /ɪnvesmənt/ investment

/t/ and /d/ can also be deleted in many cases when the following consonant belongs to a different word:



/nekst deɪ/ /neks deɪ/ next day

/əʊld mæn/ /əʊl mæn/ old man


10. Chapter 10 Stress

10.1. Definition of stress

10.2. Degrees of stress

10.2.1. Primary stress

10.2.2. Secondary stress

10.2.3. Weak stress

10.3. Rules of stress

10.4. Contrastive stress

10.5. Stress shift

10.6. Sentence stress

10.6.1 lexical and functional words

1.7. Rhythm

Exercises
10.1. Definition of stress
Stress is an elusive feature. It is hard to find a single mechanism to which the production of stress can be attributed. From the speaker's point of view, stress means greater effort in the stressed syllable, strongly stressed syllable is one " that the speaker consciously utters with greater effort than other neighboring syllables in the word or sentence".

Jones, D. (1976:134-35). Bloomfield, (1933:111) indicates that from the listener's point of view stressed syllables are louder than unstressed syllables.

Word stress is one of the most important features of spoken English. If a syllable is uttered with higher pitch and greater effort than the other adjacent syllables, the syllable is said to be accented. "The syllable or syllables of a word which stand out from the remainder are said to be accented, to receive the accent". Gimson, 1984: 223).

In other words, the accented syllable of a word is the syllable which is relatively more prominent than its neighbors. However, Jones, D (1989) distinguished between stress and prominence. According to Jones, the prominence of a syllable is its general degree of distinctness, this being the combined effort of the timbre, length, stress, and (if voiced) intonation of the syllabic sound. The term "stress" refers only to the degree of force of utterance; it is independent of length and intonation, although it may be combined with these. Prominence is a perceptual quality that may be decreased or increased by means of any of the sound attributes (length, stress, pitch, timbre); stress is an articulatory gesture. (Lehiste, 1970).


In English, the accent of words is fixed, in the sense that the main accent always falls on a particular syllable of any given word. It is also free, in the sense that the main accent is not tied to any particular position in the chain of syllables constituting a word.

Gimson listed four factors which may play a part in rendering a sound or syllable prominent. They are:



  1. stress

  2. Pitch change,

  3. sound quality and

  4. sound quantity.

(Gimson, 1984:223). Among the factors, pitch variation is rendered to be the most commonly used and efficient cue in communicating prominence for the listener. Length variation is also a strong contributory factor both as regards the association of vowel quantity with accentuation and also as a feature of prominence in its own right (Gimson, 1984:223). Stress is the weakest as regard to communicating prominence. In antique, for example, the second syllable is accented and the first is weak. In understand, the third syllable is accented and the second one is unstressed. Accent in English carries particular distinctive phonetic features. Accent is a characteristic feature of the phonological structure of English word and thus is indicated by a sign [ ' ] in pronouncing dictionaries.

Catford (1977:84) considers initiator power as the organicaerodynamic phonetic correlate of stress. Experimental observations have proved that the stressed syllable is pronounced with higher initiatory power than the unstressed syllable. The more strongly stressed a syllable is, the greater the initiator power.

Chomsky and Halle (1968), as quoted by Ladefoged, claim that it is easy to detect at least five degrees of stress in English.

Larry M. Hyman, (1975) states that stress within a word is part of the underlying phonological form. He does not favour any rules of stress assignment and argues that in languages with predictable stress, prominence is attributed to grammatical and phonological factors (Hyman, L. M. 1975:205).



Download 0.83 Mb.

Share with your friends:
1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   ...   17




The database is protected by copyright ©ininet.org 2024
send message

    Main page