Phonological Rules - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 8
About This Presentation
Title:

Phonological Rules

Description:

English: Words may not start with two stop consonants ... English plural: Cats /s/ , dogs /z/, finches /Iz/ Tagalog future: reduplication rule ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:1048
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 9
Provided by: dougbe2
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Phonological Rules


1
Phonological Rules
  • Rules about how sounds may or may not go together
    in a language
  • English Words may not start with two stop
    consonants
  • German Devoicing rulevoiced consonants at the
    ends of words are devoiced, e.g. /g/--/k/
  • Turkish Vowel harmonyin two syllable words the
    2nd vowel is dependent on the first (front vowels
    and back vowels go together)

2
Morphology
  • Morphemessmallest units of meaning in a language
  • Words (lexemes) are open class morphemes
  • Word endings plural s, past ed, prefixes and
    suffixes, infixes are closed class morphemes
  • Typically convey tense, verb agreement,
    grammatical gender, number, negation
  • English is morphologically impoverished

3
Morphophonology
  • Morphology and phonology are not independent
  • English plural
    Cats /s/ , dogs /z/, finches /Iz/
  • Tagalog future reduplication rule
  • Bili (buy), bibili (will buy)
  • Kuha (get) kukuha (will get)
  • Sulat (write) susulate (will write)

4
Semantics
  • Meanings of words and sentences and the relations
    between words and sentences
  • Some meaning relations
  • Tautology a necessarily true sentence
  • A widower has no wife.
  • Contradiction a necessarily false sentence
  • A widower has a wife.
  • Anomaly a sentence with no truth value
  • The widowers wife is a linguist.
  • Synonymy two sentences that have the same truth
    conditions
  • I am a widower.
  • My wife passed away.

5
Syntax
  • Rules of the language specifying how sounds,
    morphemes, and words may be combined to form
    meaningful sentences.
  • Rules must generate all of the grammatical
    sentences in a language, and none of the
    ungrammatical ones
  • Related to, but separable from semantics.
  • Colorless green ideas sleep furiously.
  • Green furiously sleep ideas colorless.
  • Charles ate a sandwich.
  • Charles ate sandwich.

6
Syntax Noam Chomskys Legacy
  • Chomsky (1957, 1965)
  • Revolutionized the study of language
  • Language acquisition was the inspiration
  • Believed that the ability to learn syntax is
    innate in humans (the LAD)
  • Linguists task is to describe this innate
    knowledge

7
Transformational Grammar
  • Phrase structure rules
  • --Rules that specify the permissible sequences
    of constituents (words, phrases, etc.) in a
    sentence
  • --Each rule rewrites a constituent into one or
    more other constituents
  • Transformational rules
  • Apply to entire strings of constituents by
    adding, deleting, or rearranging constituents
    into new sequences.
  • Deep Structure vs. Surface Structure
    Distinction between the underlying representation
    of a sentence and its surface form, that is,
    what you say.

8
Deep Structure vs. Surface Structure Why?
  • Three basic kinds pieces of evidence
  • Ambiguous sentences
    Visiting relatives can be boring.
    The zoo contained young
    llamas and gnus.
  • Similar surface form but not meaning John is
    eager to please vs. John is easy to please.
  • Similar meaning but not surface form Kim
    played the guitar. and The guitar was played by
    Kim.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com