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Phonological structures

The sound system of a language is has a very regular structure, consisting of sets of phonemes arranged in syllables in a limited number of ways.

For example, the syllables of English can be described in the following ways (the IPA phonetic symbols are coded in the typewriter-friendly SAMPA alphabet):

Syllable type SAMPA orthography
V /a:/, /u:/, /@U/, /aI/ a, ooh, oh/owe, I/eye, ...
CV ... ...
CCV ... ...
CCCV ... ...
VC ... ...
VCC ... ...
VCCC ... ...
CVC ... ...
CCVCC ... ...
CCCVCCC ... ...

Tasks:

  1. formulate descriptions of the other consonant sequences,
  2. find examples of monosyllabic words for each syllable type.

You will notice that not all consonant sequences are possible.

Task:

  1. Find examples of "impossible" syllables.

The classes of similar phonemes which can occur in a particular position are paradigmatically related. Thus, paradigmatic relations are defined as relations of similarity.

The phonemes which co-occur in possible sequences are syntagmatically related. Thus, syntagmatic relations are defined as part-whole or part-part relations.

Paradigmatic and syntagmatic relations, taken together, constitute the phonological structure of a language.

Part of the paradigmatic structure of English syllables:

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Part of the syntagmatic structure of English syllables:

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next up previous
Next: 20.06.2002 Phonemic annotation Up: 13.06.2002 Phonemes Previous: Phonemes

Dafydd Gibbon, Thu Jul 18 17:56:56 MEST 2002 Automatically generated, links may change - update every session.