BBN-ANG-141 foundations of phonology questions topic 4

0.0(0)
studied byStudied by 0 people
0.0(0)
full-widthCall Kai
learnLearn
examPractice Test
spaced repetitionSpaced Repetition
heart puzzleMatch
flashcardsFlashcards
GameKnowt Play
Card Sorting

1/6

encourage image

There's no tags or description

Looks like no tags are added yet.

Study Analytics
Name
Mastery
Learn
Test
Matching
Spaced

No study sessions yet.

7 Terms

1
New cards

1. What is a standard lexical set keyword?

it is a word selected by John Wells to represent all the words containing a given vowel, we can use these keywords as the "name" of that vowel

2
New cards

2. Why is it possible to transcribe strut with the schwa symbol?

partly because it is pronounced very similarly to /ə/, partly because the two vowels do not contrast: if schwa only occurs in unstressed position, then it may be seen as the unstressed allophone of strut

3
New cards

3. Why are there three keywords for oː or ɑː?

because there are three lexical sets, thought, north, force that contain /oː/ and start, bath, palm that contain /ɑː/ in British English, but not necessarily in any other variety of English (in American English, these three lexical sets contain two or three different vowels)

4
New cards

4. What is the cure-force merger?

for British speakers earlier /ʉː/ changed to /oː/ after nonpalatal consonants (poor=paw), for some British speakers this also happens after palatal consonants (sure=shore); in both cases the vowel in words of the set cure merges with that of the set force

5
New cards

5. What is the cure-nurse merger?

for some British speakers earlier /ʉː/ changed to /əː/ after palatal consonants (sure=shirr)

6
New cards

6. How do we know that rising diphthongs are not diphthongs, but consonant+vowel sequences in English?

articles select their preconsonantal allomorph before a word that begins with a rising diphthong: a ewe, th[ə] ewe (ewe [jʉw]; like a pear, the[ə] pear) vs an ouzel, th[ɪj] ouzel (like an apple, th[ɪj] apple)

7
New cards

7. What three groups of diphtongs do we distinguish?

marginal diphthongs: /ɪj ʉw/; narrow diphthongs: /ɛj əw/; and wide diphthongs (aka true diphthongs): /aw ɑj oj/