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戴炜栋_新编简明语言学教程文档版.

戴炜栋_新编简明语言学教程文档版.
戴炜栋_新编简明语言学教程文档版.

Linguistics is a scientific study of language .语言学是对语言进行的科学研究。

General linguistics is the study of language as a whole.普通语言学是对语言从整体上进行的研究

the major branches of linguistics:语言学内部主要分支

Phonetics:the study of the sounds used in linguistic communication..(语音学)对语言交流中语音的研究

Phonology the study of how sounds are put together and used to convey meaning in communication. (音位学)如何组合在一起并在交流中形传达意义

.Morphology:the study of the way in which morphemes are arranged to form words (词法学、形态学)如何排列以及组合起来构成词语

Syntax:the study of those rules that govern the combination of words to form permissible sentences (句法学)如何在组成语法上可接受的句子

Semantics(语义学) the study of meaning in abstraction语言是用来传达意义的。

Pragmatics(语用学) the study of meaning in context of use用来研究上下文的意义

跨学科分支

Sociolinguistics is the study of the relationship between language and society.社会语言学是语言和社会之间关系的研究Psycholinguistics is the study of the relationship between language and the mind.心理语言学是语言与心灵的关系的研究

Applied linguistics is the study of the teaching of foreign and second languages.应用语言学是外国和第二语言教学的研究

Some important distinctions in linguistic s语言学中一些基本区分

1. Descriptive or Prescriptive

A linguistic study is descriptive if it describes and analyses facts observed; it is prescriptive if it tries to lay down rules for "correct" behavior.描述性是在描述和分析人们对语言的实际运用,规定性是在为语言“正确和规范的”使用确立规则。

2. Synchronic and Diachronic

The description of a language at some point in time is a synchronic study and The description of a language as it changes through time is a diachronic study。共时性对语言在历史的某一时间点的描述,历时性对语言随着时间的变化而变化的描述

3. Speech and Writin g.

4. Langue and Parole

This is a distinction made by the Swiss linguist F.De Saussure (索绪尔)early last century. langue refers to the abstract linguistic system shared by all the members of a speech community and parole refers to the actualized(实际的) language, or realization of langue.瑞士语言学家索绪尔于20实际早期提出,语言是一个话语社团所有成员共有的抽象的语言系统,言语是语言在实际运用中的实现。5. Competenceand and Performance

Competence is the ideal language user's knowledge of the rules of his language. Performance is the actual realization of this knowledge in utterances(发声).语言能力定为理想的语言使用者关于语言规则方面的知识,语言运用在语言交流中的具体实现。

6Modern linguistics and traditional grammar现代语言学与传统语法

Firstly, linguistics is descriptive while traditional grammar is prescriptive. 语言学是描述性的而传统语法是规定。

Secondly, modern linguistics regards the spoken language as primary, not the written.现代语言学家认为口头语是最基本的,而不是书面语。Then, modern linguistics differs from traditional grammar also in that it does not force languages into a Latin-based framework. 现在语言学不同于传统语法还在于它不强行将语言放进一个拉丁语为基础的框架内.

Language is a system of arbitrary vocal symbols used for human communication. 语言是有任意性,用于人类交流的语音标志系统。

语言的本质特征

1 Language is a system,i.e,elements of language are combined according to certain rules.语言是一个系统,即语言的元素相结合,按照一定的规则

2 Language is arbitrary in the sense that there is no intrinsic connection between a linguistic symbol and what the symbol stands for.语言符号和符号所代表的事物之间没有内在的必然的联系,从这个意义上说语言是任意的。

3 Language is vocal because the primary medium for all languages is sound.语言是有声,因为所有语言的主要媒介都是声音

4 Language is human-specific,i.e.,it is very different from the communication systems other forms of life possess.语言是人类特有的,它与其他生物的交际系统不同

Design features of language 语言的结构,识别特征

Design features refers to the defining properties of human language that distinguish it from any animal system of communication.识别的特征指人类语言区别于任何动物交际系统的本质特征

1 arbitrariness ----It means that there is no logical convention between meaning and sounds.任意性-意味意义和语言之间的没有什么逻辑的联系

2 productivity or Creativity ---language is productivity or creativity in that it makes possible the construction and interpretation of new signals by its users.能产性-语言是能产的或具有创造性的,它使得者可以建构或和解释的新的符号

3 duality --language is system,which consists of two sets of structures.双重性-- 语言系统,它由两种结构组成套the lower or the basic level----sounds which are meaningless, but can be grouped and regrouped into words the higher level ----words which are meaningful.

4Displacement---- Language can be use to refer to contexts removed from the immediate situations of the speaker。移位性-语言能够指远离说话人所在场合的情境

5 Cultural transmission while human capacity for language has a genetic basis,the details of any language system are not genetically transmitted, but instead have to be taught and learned. 文化传承性--而人类的语言能力具有遗传的基础,任何语言系统的细节都要靠传教和学习。

Chapter 2 Phonetics and phonology

Phonetics the study of the phonic medium of language: it is concerned with all the sounds that occur in the world’s languages..语音学是对语言的媒介进行的研究,它关注语言世界中所有的语音

Three branches of phonetics语音学三个分支

Articulatory [ɑ:'tikjuleit?ri] phonetics---发音语音学(历史最悠久)

Auditory .['?:dit?ri] phonetics----听觉语音学

Acoustic [?'ku:stik] phonetics---声学语音学

three important cavities Organs of speech三个重要区域发音器官

Pharyngeal [f?rind?i:?l] cavity ---- the throat [θr?ut];咽腔,喉咙

The oral cavity ---- the mouth;口腔,嘴巴

Nasal ['ne?z?l] cavity ---- the nose.鼻腔,鼻子

Lips, teeth, teeth ridge[rid?] (alveolus)齿龈, hard palate硬腭, soft palate (velum)软腭, uvula['ju:vjul?]小舌, tip of tongue

International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA).国际音标

Orthographic {?:θ?ɡr?fik}representation of speech sounds语音的正字法表征

Broad transcription【tr?n'skr?p??】-- the transcription with letter-symbols only宽式标音是用代表字母的符号标音

Narrow transcription ---the transcription with diacritics.[,dai?'kritik]严式标音是用代表字母的符号和变音共同标音

Voiceless: when the vocal cords are spread apart, the air from the lungs passes between them unimpeded.[,?nim'pi:did]清音是当声带完全张开,气流通过声带而不引起振动

Voicing/ voiced: when the vocal cords are drawn together, the air from the lungs repeated pushes them apart as it passes through, creating a vibration[va?'bre???n] effect浊化是当气流在强行穿过的时候会使他们以不同的速度振动。

Classification of English speech sounds英语语音的分类

Vowels ['va??l] and Consonants['k?ns?n?nt] 元音和辅音

Classification of consonants辅音的分类

---- English consonants may be classified according to two dimensions[di'men??n]:1The manner of articulation 2 The place of

articulation 英语中的辅音按两种标准划分:1发音方式2发音部位

The manner of articulation

stops/plosives: [p], , [t], [d], [k], [g];闭塞音

fricatives['frik?tiv]: [f], [v], [s], [z], [], [], [], [], [h];摩擦音

affricates['?frikit]: [], [];塞擦音

liquids['likwid]: [r];[l]流音

nasals['ne?z?l]: [m], [n], [];鼻音

glides[ɡlaid] : [w], [j].滑音

The place of articulation

bilabial[bai'leibi?l]: [p],, [m], [w],[b]双唇音

labiodental ['leibi?u'dentl]: [f], [v]; 唇齿音

dental.[dent?l]齿音

alveolar [?l'vi?l?: [t], [d], [s], [z], [n], [l], [r];齿龈音

palatal ['p?l?t?l]j]; 腭音

velar ['vi:l?]软颚音

glottal ['ɡl?tl]: [h]. 喉音

Classification of English vowels英语元音的分类

1. the part of the tongue that is raised---front, center or back

2. the opening of the mouth----close, semi-close, semi-open, open

3. the shape of the lips---rounded, unrounded

4. the length of the sound---tense, lax (紧,松)

['m?n?ufθ??]or pure/single vowels元音

['d?f,θ?:? or gliding vowels双元音

front vowels central vowels back vowels

Close闭

Semi-close: 半闭

Semi-open:半开

Open:开

Phonology

Phonology studies the patterning of speech sounds, that is, the ways in which speech sounds form systems and patterns in human languages.

Phonology and phonetics are two studies different in perspectives, which are concerned with the study of speech sounds. Phonology focuses on three fundamental questions.

What sounds make up the list of sounds that can distinguish meaning in a particular language?

What sounds vary in what ways in what context?

What sounds can appear together in a sequence in a particular language?

Phonetics & phonology

Both are concerned with the same aspect of language----the speech sounds. But they differ in their approach and focus.

Phonetics is of general nature; it is interested in all the speech sounds used in all human languages; it aims to answer questions like: how they are produced, how they differ from each other, what phonetic features they have, how they can be classified, etc. Phonology aims to discover how speech sounds in a language form patterns and how these sounds are used to convey meaning in linguistic communication.

Phone, phoneme, allophone

Phone: the different versions of the abstract unit – phoneme

Phoneme: the mean-distinguishing sound in a language, placed in slash marks

Allophone: a set of phones, all of which are versions of one phoneme

Phone

---- a phonetic unit or segment. The speech sounds we hear and produce during linguistic communication are all phones. Phones do not necessarily distinguish meaning, some do, some

Phoneme

---- is a phonological unit; it is a unit of distinctive value; an abstract unit, not a particular sound, but it is represented by a certain phone in certain phonetic context, e.g.

Allophone

---- the phones that can represent a phoneme in different phonetic environments.

Phonemic contrast, complementary distribution and minimal pair.

Phonemic contrast----different or distinctive phonemes are in phonemic contrast, e.g.

----allophones of the same phoneme are in complementary distribution. They do not distinguish meaning. They occur in different phonetic contexts, e.g.

dark [l] & clear [l], aspirated [p] & unaspirated [p].

Minimal pair

----when two different forms are identical (the same) in every way except for one sound segment which occurs in the same place in the strings, the two sound combinations are said to form a minimal pair, e.g.

beat, bit, bet, bat, boot, but, bait, bite, boat.

Some rules of phonology

le

Sequential rules ---- the rules that govern the combination of sounds in a particular language, e.g. in English, “k b i I” might possibly form blik, klib, bilk, kilb.

If a word begins with a [l] or a [r], then the next sound must be a vowel.

If three consonants should cluster together at the beginning of a word, the combination should obey the following three rules, e.g. spring, strict, square, splendid, scream.

a) the first phoneme must be /s/,

b) the second phoneme must be /p/ or /t/ or /k/,

c) the third phoneme must be /l/ or /r/ or /w/.

e: “牛肉,我,俄语……”

Assimilation rule----assimilates one sound to another b y “copying” a feature of a sequential phoneme, thus making the two phones similar, e.g. the prefix in is pronounced differently when in different phonetic contexts:

Assimilation in Mandarin

好啊hao wa

海啊hai ya

看啊kan na

唱啊

跳啊tiao wa

……

Deletion rule---- it tells us when a sound is to be deleted although it is orthographically represented, e.g. design, paradigm, there is no

[g] sound; but the [g] sound is pronounced in their corresponding forms signature, designation, paradigmatic.

Syllable (what is syllable?)

d consisting of a vowel or a vowel with on

e or more than one consonant.

s in

“ apple, hidden, communism”.

Suprasegmental features----the phonemic features that occur above the level of the segments ( larger than phoneme):

Stress: word stress and sentence stress

Word stress

eech of a word:

g…

-distinctive role played by word stress is also manifested in the combinations of -ing forms and nouns: -

----the relative force given to the components of a sentence. Generally, nouns, main verbs, adjectives, adverbs, numerals and demonstrative pronouns are stressed. Other categories like articles, person pronouns, auxiliary verbs prepositions and conjunctions are usually not stressed.

He is driving my car.

My mother bought me a new skirt yesterday.

Tone

ma 妈(level)

ma 麻(the second rise)

ma 马(the third rise)

ma 骂(the fourth fall)

Intonation

wn as intonation.

most frequently used:

-rise tone (implied message)

For instance, “That’s not the book he wants.”

Grammatical functions of intonations

----Intonation plays an important role in the conveyance of meaning in almost every language, esp. in English.

a) It may indicate different sentence types by pitch direction.

b) It may impose different structures on the sentence by dividing it into different int onation units, e.g. “John didn’t come because of Marry”

Within one intonation unit, it means: John came, but it had nothing to do with Marry.

With two intonation units, it means: Marry was the reason why John didn’t come.

Exercises: Think of the utterance in different intonations:

“Those who bought quickly made a profit.”

c) It can make a certain part of a sentence especially prominent by placing nucleus on it, e.g.

Jack came yesterday by train.

d) Its attitudinal functions.

Falling tone ---- matter-of-fact statement,

downright assertion, commands.

----politeness, encouragement,

pleading.

Note: these can only be very general indications. The specific attitudinal meaning of an intonation pattern must be interpreted within a context.

Summary:

Features that are found over a segment or a sequence of two or more segments are called suprasegmental features.

These features are distinctive features.

Stress

Intonation

change the pitch of our voice to express ideas.

there are three basic intonation patterns: fall, rise, fall-rise.

Tone

al tone language.

– phonemes

in minimal pairs and minimal sets.

rwhelming majority of the consonants and vowels represented by the English phonetic alphabet are in contrastive distribution.

ms of phonetic features. Therefore, they are separate phonemes.

– allophones

ribution and share a number of features, they are allophones of the same phoneme.

aid to be in free variation.

-distinctive features

-distinctive features.

-distinctive in another.

本章重点:Phonology is a major branch of linguistics. It is the study of the sound systems of languages and of the general properties of sound systems.

The differences between phonetics and phonology

Phonetics is regarded as the linguistic study to identify and describe the characteristics of all the speech sounds that occur in all human languages, whereas phonology is the description of the sound systems and patterns of individual languages. Phonetics provides the means for phonological description. And in a sense, phonology is really the application of phonetics to the process of communication in a particular language or languages. Phonetics is the study of the production, perception, and physical properties of speech sounds; phonology attempts to account for how they are combined, organized, and convey meaning in particular languages.

Speaker’s mind---------mouth---------- ear-------- listener’s mind

Phonology phonetics

Phonetics Phonology

Sounds of language functioning of sounds as part of a language

Parole, speech act language, language system

Universal language-specific

Concrete abstract

Phone [ ] phoneme / /

Although both are related to the study of sounds, phonetics studies the production, transmission, and reception of sounds while phonology focuses on the linguistic patterns of speech sounds and how they are used to convey meaning in linguistic communication.

A phone is A phoneme is

One of many possible sounds in the languages of the world A distinctive unit in the sound system of a particular language The smallest identifiable unit found in a stream of speech A minimal unit that serves to distinguish between meanings of words

Pronounced in a defined way Pronounced in one or more ways, depending on the number of allophones

Represented between brackets by convention Represented between slashed by convention

Example: , [l] Example: /b/, /l/

A phoneme is a phonological unit; it is a unit that is of distinctive value. A phone is a phonetic unit or segment. The speech sounds we hear and produce during linguistic communication are all phones. The different phones representing a phoneme in different phonetic environments are called its allophones (音位变体)

The definitions of phone, phoneme, allophone, minimal pair and free variation, theories on phoneme, phonemic contrast and complementary distribution, feature on phonetic similarity and distinction; assimilation rule, deletion rule, suprasegmetnal features (syllables, stress, tone, intonation, pitch, etc.)

How do you find a phoneme?

You know something is a phoneme if it is a distinctive sound in the language

How do you find the sounds distinctive?

If you find a minimal pair, you know the sounds are distinctive

What is minimal pair?

If you have two words which are exactly identical with respect to sounds except for one sound, and the different sounds are at the same position, and the two words have different meanings, then you have a minimal pair. Phonetics-----the study of speech sounds

Phonology-----the study of sounds systems

Phoneme vs. phone/ allophone

/ phoneme/ ----------------------abstract

Actual sound

/t/ ---------------------phoneme

Phone

Two phones never occur in the same environment -------complementary distribution

Two phones can occur in the same environment-------free variation

Although we generalize some rules for word stress, it should be born in mind that sometimes the exceptions may

well make one give up the ideal of rules.

Exercises from our school:

1. Complementary distribution

2. what is articulatory phonetics, explain the primacy of speech over writing,

3. divide the following words into morphemes. For each morpheme, identify the type (lexical or grammatical, free or bound, prefix or suffix, inflectional or derivational), where applicable.

1) restate

2) strongest

4. what is illustrated with the following pronunciations?

1) cap [kap] can

2) tent, tenth

answer: 1) restate={re}+{state}

{re}=grammatical, bound, prefix,derivational

{state}=lexical, free

3) strongest={strong}+{SUP}

{strong}=lexical, free

{SUP}=grammatical, bound, suffix, inflectional

1) nasalization 2) dentalization

they are examples of regressive assimilation (逆同化) Page 60 by Hu

5. the phrase French literature teacher constitutes a case of lexical ambiguity

6. syntax is made up of one morpheme.

7. artificial satellite is a case of loanblending. (P102 by Hu)

8. a single phoneme may represent a single morpheme, so they are identical

9. derivational affixes often change the lexical meaning

FFFFT

10. for each of the following words transcribe phonetically and account for the allomorphs of the past tense morpheme: waited, waved, waded, wiped

11. illustrate assimilation with two examples.

12. describe the initial sounds of the following words: toe, chin, thank, goat, moon

13. what are the terms used to describe the word-formation processes of the following words? Vaseline, carelessness, football, car-phone, AIDS

Answers: 10. /id/ (/d/ would merge with another alveolar plosive if not separated by a vowel)

/d/ (voiced /v/ is followed by voiced /d/)

/t/ ( voiceless /p/ is followed by voiceless /t/)

11. assimilation is a process by which one sound takes on some or all the characteristics of a neighbouring sounds

12. voiceless alveolar stop, voiceless palato-alveolar stop, voiceless dental fricative, voiced velar stop, voiced bilabial nasal.

13. invention, derivation, compounding, clipping and compounding, acronym

14. the phonology or pronunciation of a specific regional dialect is called_____

15. ___________is the study of the physical properties of speech sounds

16. phones which never occur in the same phonetic environment are said to be in_____

17. A bound grammatical morpheme is called_____

18. the word formation process, _______is exemplified by the word “brunch”

19. the IPA chart contains a set of _____ for the purpose of transcribing the minute difference between variations of the same sound

Accent, acoustic phonetics, complementary distribution, inflectional morpheme, blending, diacritics

20. compare the two terms: morpheme and allomorph, distinctive features and semantic features

A phoneme is further analyzable because it consists of a set of simultaneous distinctive features. It is just because of its distinctive features that a phoneme is capable of distinguishing meaning. The features that a phoneme possesses, making it different from other phonemes, are its distinctive features. On the analogy of distinctive features in phonology, some linguists suggest that there are semantic features. The meaning of a word can be dissected into meaning components, called semantic features.

21. give the phonetic features of each of the following sounds: [l], [v], [e], [u:]

[l] voiced alveolar lateral; [v] voiced labiodental fricative; [e] central front lax ungrounded vowel; [u:] high back

tense rounded vowel

22. Is stress a phonological property? Why?

Stress is one of suprasegmental features which are the phonological properties of such units as the syllable, the word, and the sentence. The location of stress in English distinguishes meaning. Word stress plays the meaning-distinctive role.

23. Affricates consist of a stop followed immediately afterwards by a fricative at the same place of articulation

24. the assimilation rule doesn’t account for the varying pronunciation of the alveolar nasal [n] in some sound combinations

25. prefixes not only modify the meaning of a stem but also change the part of speech of the original word

T F F

26. in what way can we determine whether a phone is a phoneme or not?

A basic way to determine the phonemes of a language is to see if substituting one sound for another results in a change of meaning. If it does, the two sounds then represent different phonemes

27. what kind of evidence could be used to argue that action and package each contain two morphemes: {act}+ {ion} and {pack}+ {age}?

(hint: a morpheme can appear independently in other words.)

Answers: {act} occurs in act, actor, active, react

{ion} occurs in construction, projection,, inflection, rejection

{pack} occurs in pack, packs, packed, packing, packer

{age} occurs in wreckage, baggage, breakage

28. a(n)_____ is the base form of a word that cannot further be analyzed without total loss of identity

29. in the production of _____sounds, such as [p], the upper and the lower lips are brought together to create obstruction.

30. ______is a process by which one sound takes on some or all the characteristics of a neighbouring sound.

31. all syllables must have a ____ but not all syllables contain an onset and a coda. ( 核心,节首辅音,结尾音节) (page 69 by Hu)

Root, bilabial, assimilation, nucleus

32. compare phonology and phonetics.

33. account for the difference in articulation in each of the following pairs of words:

coast ghost, boast most

the words coast and ghost are distinguished by the fact that the initial segment is voiceless in the case of the former and voiced in the case of the latter. Boast and most are distinguished by the manner of articulation of the initial segment, /b/ being bilabial, /m/ being nasal.

34. what are the two major media of communication? Of the two, which one is primary and why

What are three branches of phonetics? How do they contribute to the study of speech sounds.

Explain with examples how broad transcription and narrow transcription differ

What criteria are used to classify the English vowels?

Give the phonetic symbol for each of the following sound descriptions

Give the phonetic features of each of the following sounds

What is a minimal pair and what is a minimal set? Why is it important to identify the minimal set in a language? Explain with examples the sequential rule, the assimilation rule, and the deletion rule.

What are suprasegmental features? How do the major suprasegmental features of English function in conveying meaning?

Supplementary Exercises

Chapter 2:Phonology

I. Decide whether each of the following statements is True or False:

1. Voicing is a phonological feature that distinguishes meaning in both Chinese and English.

2. If two phonetically similar sounds occur in the same environments and they distinguish meaning, they are said to be in complementary distribution.

3. A phone is a phonetic unit that distinguishes meaning.

4. English is a tone language while Chinese is not.

5. In linguistic evolution, speech is prior to writing.

6. In everyday communication, speech plays a greater role than writing in terms of the amount of information conveyed.

7. Articulatory phonetics tries to describe the physical properties of the stream of sounds which a speaker issues with the help of a machine called spectrograph.

8. The articulatory apparatus of a human being are contained in three important areas: the throat, the

mouth and the chest.

9. Vibration of the vocal cords results in a quality of speech sounds called voicing.

10. English consonants can be classified in terms of place of articulation and the part of the tongue that is raised the highest.

11. According to the manner of articulation, some of the types into which the consonants can be classified are stops, fricatives, bilabial and alveolar.

12. Vowel sounds can be differentiated by a number of factors: the position of tongue in the mouth, the openness of the mouth, the shape of the lips, and the length of the vowels.

13. According to the shape of the lips, vowels can be classified into close vowels, semi-close vowels, semi-open vowels and open vowels.

14. Any sound produced by a human being is a phoneme.

15. Phones are the sounds that can distinguish meaning.

16. Phonology is concerned with how the sounds can be classified into different categories.

17. A basic way to determine the phonemes of a language is to see if substituting one sound for another results in a change of meaning.

18. When two different forms are identical in every way except for one sound segment which occurs in the same place in the strings, the two words are said to form a phonemic contrast.

19. The rules governing the phonological patterning are language specific.

20. Distinctive features of sound segments can be found running over a sequence of two or more phonemic segments.

II. Fill in each of the following blanks with one word which begins with the letter given:

21. A ____ refers to a strong puff of air stream in the production of speech sounds.

22. A___________ phonetics describes the way our speech organs work to produce the speech sounds and how they differ.

23. The four sounds /p/,/b/,/m/ and /w/ have one feature in common, i.e, they are all b_______ sounds.

24. Of all the speech organs, the t ____ is the most flexible, and is responsible for varieties of articulation than any other.

25. English consonants can be classified in terms of manner of articulation or in terms of p_______ of articulation.

26. When the obstruction created by the speech organs is total or complete, the speech sound produced with the obstruction audibly released and the air passing out again is called a s________.

27. S_________ features are the phonemic features that occur above the level of the segments. They include stress, tone, intonation, etc.

28. The rules that govern the combination of sounds in a particular lan?guage are called s ____ rules.

29. The transcription of speech sounds with letter-symbols only is called broad transcription while the transcription with letter-symbols together with the diacritics is called n_________ transcription.

30. When pitch, stress and sound length are tied to the sentence rather than the word in isolation, they are collectively known as i_________.

31. P___________ is a discipline which studies the system of sounds of a particular language and how sounds are combined into meaningful units to effect linguistic communication.

32. The articulatory apparatus of a human being are contained in three important cavities: the pharyngeal cavity, the o_______ cavity and the nasal cavity.

33. T_______ are pitch variations, which are caused by the differing rates of vibration of the vocal cords and which can distinguish meaning just like phonemes.

34. Depending on the context in which stress is considered, there are two kinds of stress: word stress and s_________ stress.

III. There are four choices following each of the statements below. Mark the choice that can best complete the statement:

35. Of all the speech organs, the _______ is/ are the most flexible.

A. mouth

B. lips

C. tongue

D. vocal cords

36.The sounds produced without the vocal cords vibrating are ____ sounds.

A. voiceless

B. voiced

C. vowel

D. consonantal

37.__________ is a voiced alveolar stop.

A. /z/

B. /d/

C. /k/

D./b/

38. The assimilation rule assimilates one sound to another by “copying”a feature of a sequential phoneme, thus making the two phones ____________.

A. identical

B. same

C. exactly alike

D. similar

39. Since /p/ and /b/ are phonetically similar, occur in the same environments and they can distinguish meaning, they are said to be ___________.

A. in phonemic contrast

B. in complementary distribution

C. the allophones

D. minimal pair

40. The sound /f/ is _________________.

A. voiced palatal affricate

B. voiced alveolar stop

C. voiceless velar fricative

D. voiceless labiodental fricative

41. A ____ vowel is one that is produced with the front part of the tongue maintaining the highest position.

A. back

B. central

C. front

D. middle

42. Distinctive features can be found running over a sequence of two or more phonemic segments. The phonemic features that occur above the level of the segments are called ____________.

A. phonetic components

B. immediate constituents

C. suprasegmental features

D. semantic features

43. A(n) ___________ is a unit that is of distinctive value. It is an abstract unit, a collection of distinctive phonetic features.

A. phone

B. sound

C. allophone

D. phoneme

44. The different phones which can represent a phoneme in different phonetic environments are called the ____ of that phoneme.

A. phones

B. sounds

C. phonemes

D. allophones

IV. Define the terms below:

45. phonology 46. phoneme 47.allophone

48. international phonetic alphabet

49. intonation 50. phonetics 51. auditory phonetics

52. acoustic phonetics 53. phone 54. phonemic contrast 55. tone 56. minimal pair

V. Answer the following questions as comprehensively as possible. Give ex?amples for illustration if necessary:

57. Of the two media of language, why do you think speech is more basic than writing?

58. What are the criteria that a linguist uses in classifying vowels?

59. What are the major differences between phonology and phonetics?

60. Illustrate with examples how suprasegmental features can affect meaning.

61. In what way can we determine whether a phone is a phoneme or not?

Suggested answers to supplementary exercises

IV. Define the terms below:

45. phonology: Phonology studies the system of sounds of a particular language; it aims to discover how speech sounds in a language form patterns and how these sounds are used to convey meaning in linguistic communication.

46. phoneme: The basic unit in phonology is called phoneme; it is a unit of distinctive value. But it is an abstract unit. To be exact, a phoneme is not a sound; it is a collection of distinctive phonetic features.

47. allophone: The different phones which can represent a phoneme in different phonetic environments are called the allophones of that phoneme.

48. international phonetic alphabet: It is a standardized and internationally accepted system of phonetic

transcription.

49. intonation: When pitch, stress and sound length are tied to the sentence rather than the word in isolation, they are collectively known as intonation.

50. phonetics: Phonetics is defined as the study of the phonic medium of language; it is concerned with all the sounds that occur in the world' s languages

51. auditory phonetics: It studies the speech sounds from the hearer's point of view. It studies how the sounds are perceived by the hear?er.

52. acoustic phonetics: It studies the speech sounds by looking at the sound waves. It studies the physical means by which speech sounds are transmitted through the air from one person to another.

53. phone : Phones can be simply defined as the speech sounds we use when speaking a language. A phone is a phonetic unit or segment. It does not necessarily distinguish meaning.

54. phonemic contrast: Phonemic contrast refers to the relation between two phonemes. If two phonemes can occur in the same environment and distinguish meaning, they are in phonemic contrast.

55. tone: Tones are pitch variations, which are caused by the differing rates of vibration of the vocal cords.

56. minimal pair: When two different forms are identical in every way except for one sound segment which occurs in the same place in the strings, the two words are said to form a minimal pair.

V. Answer the following questions as comprehensively as possible. Give ex?amples for illustration if necessary: 57. Of the two media of language, why do you think speech is more basic than writing?

1) In linguistic evolution, speech is prior to writing.

2) In everyday communication, speech plays a greater role than writing in terms of the amount of information conveyed.

3) Speech is always the way in which every native speaker acquires his mother tongue, and writing is learned and taught later at school.

58. What are the criteria that a linguist uses in classifying vowels?

1) Vowels may be distinguished as front, central and back in terms of the position of the tongue in the mouth.

2) According to how wide our mouth is opened, we classify the vowels into four groups: close vowels, semi-close vowels, semi-open vowels, and open vowels.

3) According to the shape of the lips, vowels are divided into rounded vowels and unrounded vowels.

4) The English vowels can also be classified into long vowels and short vowels according to the length of the sound.

59. What are the major differences between phonology and phonetics?

They differ in their approach and focus. Phonetics is of a general nature; it is interested in all the speech sounds used in all human languages: how they are produced, how they differ from each other, what phonetic features they possess, how they can be classified. Phonology, on the other hand, is interested in the system of sounds of a particular language; it aims to discover how speech sounds in a language form patterns and how these sounds are used to convey meaning in linguistic communication.

60. Illustrate with examples how suprasegmental features can affect meaning.

1) The location of stress in English distinguishes meaning, such as `import and im`port. The similar alternation of stress also occurs between a compound noun and a phrase consisting of the same elements. A phonological feature of the English compounds, is that the stress of the word always falls on the first element and the second element receives secondary stress, for example: `blackbird is a particular kind of bird, which is not necessarily black, but a black `bird is a bird that is black.

2) The more important words such as nouns, verbs adjectives , adverbs,etc are pronounced with greater force and made more prominent. But to give special emphasis to a certain notion, a word in sentence that is usually unstressed can be stressed to achieve different effect. Take the sentence “He is driving my car.”for example. To emphasize the fact that the car he is driving is not his, or yours, but mine, the speaker can stress the possessive pronoun my, which under normal circumstances is not stressed.

3) English has four basic types of intonation, known as the four tones: When spoken in different tones, the same sequence of words may have different meanings. Generally speaking, the falling tone indicates that what is said is a straight-forward, matter-of-fact statement, the rising tone often makes a question of what is said, and the fall-rise tone often indicates that there is an implied message in what is said.

61. In what way can we determine whether a phone is a phoneme or not?

A basic way to determine the phonemes of a language is to see if substituting one sound for another results in a change of meaning. If it does, the two sounds then represent different phonemes.

Chapter 3 Morphology

Morphology refers to the study of the internal structure of words and the rules by which words are formed.形态学是对词

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