Phonology Vocab
Phonology – The study of speech sounds and patterns in a language.
Phone – A single speech sound represented by one symbol.
Phoneme – A family of sounds that change meaning in a language (e.g., pin/bin).
Allophone – A variation of a phoneme that doesn’t change the meaning (e.g., top/stop).
Consonant – A sound made by interrupting or constricting airflow using articulatory muscles.
Consonant Cluster – Two or three consonants spoken together in a word (e.g., "st" in stop).
Vowel – A voiced sound made with an open vocal tract (e.g., /i/ in "eat").
Diphthong – A vowel sound that glides from one position to another (e.g., /aɪ/ in "ice").
Articulation – The movement of speech organs to produce sounds.
Coarticulation – How sounds influence each other during speech (e.g., "seen" vs. "ski").
Phonotactics – Rules for how sounds can be arranged in a language (e.g., "ng" can’t start words in English).
Morphophonemics – How sounds change when combined with morphemes (e.g., plural "cats" /s/ vs. "dogs" /z/).
Dialect – Variations of a language spoken by different regions or groups (e.g., "y’all" vs. "you guys").
Phonetic Transcription – Writing speech sounds using a consistent system like IPA.
Phonetics – The study of speech sounds, including articulation, acoustics, and perception.
Functional Articulation Disorder – A speech disorder with no known physical cause.
Organic Disorder – A speech disorder caused by a physical condition (e.g., hearing loss, dysarthria).
Apraxia of Speech – A disorder affecting speech coordination and sequencing, not caused by muscle weakness.
Dysarthria – A speech disorder due to muscle weakness or paralysis.
Intelligibility – How well someone’s speech is understood.
Phonetic Inventory – A list of all the speech sounds a child can produce.
Homonym – Words that sound the same due to phonological processes (e.g., "tea" and "key" both pronounced /ti/).
Homorganic Sounds – Sounds made in the same place of articulation (e.g., /t/, /d/, and /n/ at the alveolar ridge).
Idioms – Words pronounced differently than expected in a child’s phonological system.
Diadochokinesis (DDK) – The speed and accuracy of rapid speech movements (e.g., "pataka, pataka").
Stimulability – A person’s ability to imitate a speech sound after being shown how.
Prosody (Suprasegmentals) – Features like stress, intonation, and rhythm in speech.
Cognate – Pairs of consonants that only differ by voicing (e.g., /t/ and /d/).
Strident – Sounds with high-intensity noise (e.g., /s/, /z/, /f/).
Obstruent – Sounds with complete or partial airflow blockage (stops, fricatives, affricates).
Sonorant – Sounds with continuous airflow (vowels, nasals, liquids, glides).
Continuant – Sounds made with incomplete constriction of airflow (e.g., /s/, /z/, /w/).
Rhotic – Sounds related to /r/ (e.g., "red," "br," "er").