ENGLISH PHONOLOGY

 Course DescriptionRequirements/GradingTexts Schedule

Special AssignmentsResources


COURSE DESCRIPTION

The course explains the articulatory system for language that leads to the production of vowel and consonant sounds in the major dialects in the sound system of English.  The course also will introduce students acoustic phonetics and to general principles of phonological rules and representations.  The course should prepare students to be able to describe and transcribe the sounds of spoken language (with special emphasis on English).  The course will also prepare students to be able to recognize and describe the phonemic and phonotactic patterns necessary to understand basic phonological processes and problems in generative phonology. 


REQUIREMENTS

Reading:
Chapters indicated in the syllabus should be read before the lecture.  Regular attendance in class is expected.  The reading from the text will be covered in lecture and class discussion.  If, after reading and attending the lectures the material is still troublesome for you, I am happy to help you privately during my office hours. 

Problems:
Students with little background in linguistics can find this course challenging.  The best way to learn phonology is to do phonology problems.  Doing the problems regularly and in a timely fashion will help ensure that you are understanding the material and will lead to success on your examinations.  The problems assigned for homework will be done in groups.  Each person in the group should do all the problems before meeting with your group.  After your group meetings, each group should submit one set of problems to be graded.


Supplementary problems will also be provided for those who would like extra practice.  Answers for these problems will be provided on the course website. 

Quizzes and Exams:
The quizzes are short (20 minutes) tests your understanding of basic concepts (vowels, consonants, IPA).  Exams consist of questions ranging from multiple choice to short answers and problem sets. For the two 50 minute mid-term exams, there are 20 to 30 questions per exam covering material presented in that section of the class. The final two-hour exam is cumulative and will have approximately 50 questions.

 

Breakdown of points:
Exercises                  10 pts for each weekly assignment, done in groups 

Quizzes                     25 pts for each (4 during the semester) 

Exams
    Midterms (2)       60 pts
    Final                    100 pts 

  Grade Percentages:
                                             A (above 92%)
                                             AB (85-92%)
                                             B (77-84%)
                                             BC (69-76%)
                                             C (61-68%)
                                             D (53-60%)
                                             F (below 53%) 

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TEXT(S)

Required text:
    Davenport, Mike & S.J. Hannahs. (1998) Introducing Phonetics and Phonology. London: Arnold. 

Recommended and on reserve:
   Ladefoged, Peter. (1993). A Course in Phonetics. New York: Harcourt Brace. 


SCHEDULE

1. Introduction to the course                                            chapter 1 

2.  Articulatory phonetics                                                chapter 2
the speech production system 

3.    Articulatory phonetics/Consonants
articulators
voicing
manner and place of articulation 

4.  Consonants                                                                chapter 3
details of consonant description 

5.  Consonants/Quiz                                                       chapter 3
review and quiz 

6.     Vowels                                                                    chapter 4
major features
placement/allophonic variation/tense-lax 

7.     Vowels                                                                    chapter 4
diphthongs
additional features for vowels 

8.    Vowels-Quiz; suprasegmentals
review and quiz 

9.   suprasegmentals (part I)
        English: stress, intonation, tone unit 

10.     Lab demonstration on acoustical phonetics               chapter 5
 

11.     Distinctive Features                                                  chapter 6
    motivation for (Jacobson/Chomsky and Halle)
     major classes
     features for consonants 

12.    Distinctive Features                                                  chapter 6
             vowels 

13.    Distinctive features                                                   chapter 6
 

14.     Midterm Exam
 

15.      Introduction  to Phonology                                     chapter 7
structuralist
phoneme, allophone, minimal pairs
 

16.     Phonemic Analysis
phonetic similarity/naturalness 

 

17.     Phonemic Analysis
                system symmetry 

18.        Quiz
 

19.     Phonological Alternations                                             chapter 8
   alternation types
    phonetic, morphological, suppletive 

20.     Phonological Alternations
   formal rules and rule writing
   phonological processes 

21.     Phonological Alternations
 

22.     Problem day/catch up
 

23.    Midterm Exam
 

24.  Phonological Structure                                                  chapter 9
   representations- feature matrices, feature geometry
 

25.     Phonological Structure (Suprasegmentals II)
             syllable, tone, autosegmental phonology
 

26.     Intonation Units, syllable, rhythm                            supplementary material 

27.     Phonological Structure
   review and problems
 

28.     Quiz- Phonological Structure                                      chapter 10
Derivational Analysis /Phonotactics 

29.  SLA, phonotactics, review
 
30.  FINAL EXAM 

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SPECIAL ASSIGNMENTS

HO ch 2, Practice--Answers
1.     a) mat, bat, pack      d) dark, lamp, trump, still
        b) girl, cold               e) thin, then, think
        c) vent, flat, phone     f) chin, jump, shore
 

a. alveolar, + voice
b. interdental, +voice
c. velar, +voice
d. alveopalatal, -voice
e. bilabial, +voice
f. alveopalatal, -voice
g. interdental, -voice
h. alveolar, -voice
i. velar and alveolar, -voice
j. alveopalatal, +voice
k. bilabial, +voice
l. velar, -voice
m. alveopalatal, +voice
n. labiodental, +voice
o. alveolar, +voice
p. alveolar, +voice 

HO, ch 3 practice
A)                                                                                                B)
1. voiceless, velar, stop                                                                    1. ["ethe"]
2. voiced, alveolar, liquid (approximate), retroflex rhotic                   2. [h]
3. voiced, uvular, trill                                                                        3. [l]
4. voiced, labiodental, fricative                                                         4. [t]
5. voiceless, bilabial, stop                                                                 5. we didn't talk about this in class.  A voiceless
6. voiceless, bilabial, aspirated stop                                                    alveopalatal fricative would be a "sh"
7. voiceless, alveopalatal, affricate 

HO- Practice exercises- Natural classes
2. all are sonorants, but the retroflex "r" is not a nasal
3. all are fricatives except [n]
4. all are voiceless except [g]
5. all are alveolar except [k]
6. all have some kind of labial articulation except [t]
7. all are fricatives except for the "c" with the hachek over it, which is an affricate
8. all are tense vowels except for [I]
9. all are non-low vowels except for [ae] 

2.  alveolar stops
3. velar stops
4. nasal stops
5. non-front vowels (in some vowels systems, these would be the class of "back vowels") 

Intonation Contours 

1.  6.
2.  7.
3.   8.
4.  9.
5.   10.
 

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PHONETICS/PHONOLOGY RESOURCES ON THE INTERNET 

Vowels and Consonants of American and British English
click here 

Practice reading acoustical
Information on U.S. dialects                                                  cues for speech sounds
click here                                                                                                 click here
 
 

 
Sounds of the World's Languages-
 from Peter Ladefoged's Website
 

Information on the languages of the world
click here

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