Sound Changes
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Transcript of Sound Changes
Sound Changes
Prof. Julia NeeComparative Linguistics
Spring 2014, LaSalle University
The Importance of Sound Changes
• Useful in the comparative method of determining how languages are related
• Helpful in discovering which words are loanwords from other languages
• Used to trace the evolution of languages from a common proto-language by comparison of how sounds shifted from the original form to the modern form
Vowels
Places of Articulation
IPA Consonants
The Speech String
• Speech is seamless:– The good can decay many ways.– The stuffy nose can lead to problems.– Some others I’ve seen.
• Sounds of a word cannot be completely separated; they blend into one another
Swahili
• Watotowaafrikayamasharikiwanapendasanakusomanakuchezawatotowadogowanaanzamasomokatikashulezachekecheabaadayashuleyachekecheawaohuendashuleyamsingiwatotohusomashuleyachekecheakwamwakammojaaumiakamiwili.
Swahili
• Watoto wa Afrika ya Mashariki wanapenda sana kusoma na kucheza. Watoto wadogo wanaanza masomo katika shule za chekechea. Baada ya shule ya chekechea wao huenda shule ya msingi. Watoto husoma shule ya chekechea kwa mwaka mmoja au miaka miwili.
• Children in East Africa like to study and play. Small children begin their studies in kindergarten. After kindergarten, they go to elementary school. They go to kindergarten for one or two years.
The Speech String
1. Mabasiyakuendamjini yakowapi?
2. Hoteliyanguikowapi?3. Kituochabasikikowapi?4. Vipininawezakuendakit
uochatreni?5. Naulikiasigani?
1. Where are the buses to the city?
2. Where is my hotel?3. Where’s the bus
station?4. How do I get to the
train station?5. What’s the fare?
The Speech String
1. Mabasi ya kuenda mjini yako wapi?
2. Hoteli yangu iko wapi?3. Kituo cha basi kiko
wapi?4. Vipi ninaweza kuenda
kituo cha treni?5. Nauli kiasi gani?
1. Where are the buses to the city?
2. Where is my hotel?3. Where’s the bus
station?4. How do I get to the
train station?5. What’s the fare?
Phoneme Inventory
• Each language has a particular set of phonemes that it uses
• Acceptable Patterns:ptak drau hladuprast sram mglavlas flin dnomrtut tolp nyip
Syllable Structure
• Phonemes are assembled into Syllables
• Languages have their own rules about how syllables can be built– English: Rime can be V + C (C) (C)– Japanese: C + V
Phonetics / Phonemics
• The sounds that we have stored in our heads change before they come out of our mouths
• Phones = the sounds that actually occur• Phonemes = the ideas that are stored in our
heads• How are phonetics and phonemics different?– Some phones are stored the same way phonemically– ‘t’ sound of ‘but’ vs. ‘butter’
How are phones and phonemes different?
• What are the sounds in “tap” and “pat”?• Different ‘p’: /tæp/ and /phæt/• Use minimal pairs to find phonemes:– /cæt/ vs. /cot/– /como/ vs. /cono/
• If you can’t find minimal pairs, then you may have two allophones of a phoneme!
Let’s try…
• Does /ŋ/ occur in your dialect of Spanish? Where? Is it a phoneme or an allophone?
• What is the distribution of the flapped vs. the trilled ‘r’?
Phonetic Rules
• Rules can be applied to the phonemes stored in our heads based on their environments
• The result is different phonetic outputs• Multiple rules can apply to the same word– i > ei / _ t– t > ɾ / V _ V– ‘write’ /wreit/ – /wreiting/ /wreiɾing/
The Regularity Principle
• Sound change is regular– The change takes place whenever the sound or
sounds which undergo the change are found in the circumstances or environments that condition the change
– Spanish: p > b / V_V (“p” becomes “b” between vowels)
• Essential to our ability to reconstruct proto-languages
Conditioned / Unconditioned
• Conditioned changes: changes that take place only in certain contexts– Ex: p > b / V_V
• Unconditioned changes: changes that take place generally, no matter what sounds are around it– Ex: ly > y in Latin American Spanish (calye > caye)
Let’s try…
• Apply the rule and determine which words are pronounced in the same way:– C > [+voiced] / V_V
Cady Slinking RazorCatty Slinging Racer/Kɑdi/ /slɪŋkɪŋ/ /reɪzər//Kɑti/ /slɪŋgɪŋ/ /reɪsər/
Phonemic / Non-Phonemic (Allophonic)
• Phonemic Changes: affect the inventory of phonemes
• Non-Phonemic (Allophonic) Changes: don’t affect the phonemes in the language; shift in pronunciation only– Ex: t > ɾ / V _ V– Flaps don’t exist anywhere else in English, so we
don’t even realize we have that sound!• We will focus on PHONEMIC changes
Merger
• A, B > B or A, B > C– ly, j > j (Latin American Spanish)– e, o, a > a (Sanskrit)
Sanskrit Latin PIE Definition
Ad- Ed- *ed ‘to eat’
Avi- Ovi- *owi ‘sheep’
Ajra- Ager *aˆgro- ‘field’
Dent *dent ‘tooth’
Duo *dwo ‘two’
Ab *apo ‘away, from’
Merger
• Mergers are irreversible• Once a merger is complete, children learn the
new sound• Ex: b, p > b– Bebi > bebi– Papi > babi
• A separation of b and p would end up being distributed differently: b > p / _a
Split
• Splits follow mergers• In splits, the sounds in question don’t change,
but their phonetic status is changed because of the merger of sounds in their environment
Split: an examplemouse mice foot feet
Stage 1 (no changes) /mu:s/[mu:s]
/mu:s-i/[mu:s-i]
/fo:t/[fo:t]
/fo:t-i/[fo:t-i]
Umlaut /mu:s/[mu:s]
/mu:s-i/[my:s-i]
/fo:t/[fo:t]
/fo:t-i/[fø:t-i]
Loss of –I /mu:s/[mu:s]
/my:s/[my:s]
/fo:t/[fo:t]
/fø:t/[fø:t]
Assimilation
• One sound becomes more similar to another• Change is brought about by a neighboring
sound• Total – Partial– Total: one sound becomes another sound;
Caribbean Spanish: h > C / _C– Partial: one sound takes one some of the
characteristics of another; English: d > t / [-voiced]_
Other Types of Common Sound Changes
• Deletions• Epentheses or insertions• Compensatory lengthening• Metathesis• Palatalization• Voicing• Devoicing