(Materials adapted from ANT 522 Intro. to Phonology by Lee Bickmore, UAlbany)

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REVIEW:PHONOLOGICAL ANALYSIS & MORPHOLOGICAL ANALYSIS

(Materials adapted from ANT 522 Intro. to Phonology by Lee Bickmore, UAlbany)

Write the phonetic symbols representing each sound: Voiced labiodental fricative Voiceless palatal affricate Voiced velar nasal Voiced palatal fricative Voiced labiovelar glide Voiced alveolar retroflex

Write the phonetic symbols representing each sound: High front tense unrounded vowel Mid back lax rounded vowel Low back lax unrounded vowel Mid front tense unrounded vowel

Height Front-Back Tense-Lax Roundness

Place Manner Voicing

What is similar between these sounds: [p], [s], [f], [k] [y], [tʃ], [dʃ], [ʃ], [ʒ] [v], [ð], [m], [ʒ], [a]

Which one does not fit: [f], [θ], [z], [ʤ] [h], [ʒ] [v], [g], [s], [u], [e], [t], [r], [n], [ŋ], [z]

Main Topics

1. Phonological Analysis: Allophones Solving data sets on allophones Using distinctive features Formulating phonological rules &

Underlying Representations (UR).

2. Morphological Analysis Finding individual morphemes Lead up to morpho-phonemic analysis

Phonological Analysis: AllophonesExercise: Old English

1. Analyze the distribution of [n] and [ŋ]. [x] is a voiceless velar fricative.

2. Is there any phonological process going on?

Phonological Analysis: AllophonesExercise: Greek

1. Analyze the sounds: [x, k, ç, c]. • [x] is a voiceless velar fricative• [ç] is a voiceless palatal fricative• [c] is a voiceless palatal stop

2. Which sounds are in contrastive distribution?3. Which sounds are in complementary distribution?4. What are the phonological rules?

Phonological Analysis: AllophonesExercise: Igbirra

1. Analyze the sounds: [e] and [a]2. State the phonological rules.

Phonological Analysis: AllophonesExercise: Tamil

1. Analyze the sounds: [ʊ] and [ɯ]2. State the phonological rules.

Morphological Analysis for PhonologyA. Basic assumptions:

1. A morpheme is a meaning unit (which cannot be further divided into compositional meaning units).

2. Morphemes can combine to make words. E.g. ke-merdeka-an.

3. Morphemes can be divided into: roots and affixes (Suffix, Prefix, Infix).

Words can have more than 1 affix: ke-ter-buka-an Words can have more than 1 root=compound words

e.g. sepakbola.

4. There can be homophonous morphemes: E.g. a-typical, a; in-correct, in; un-happy, un-tie

B. Foreign words and English glosses1. Sometimes 1 English word = 1 Foreign word: Spanish

perro = English dog

Sometimes 1 E morpheme = 1 Foreign morpheme: Plural perro-s, dog-s

2. What is 2 morphemes in a single word in one lang = 2 separate words in another language.

Spanish: Cant-o = English: I sing

3. Sometimes what is glossed with more than one morpheme (or word) in Eng. is simply one morpheme in the other language.

Aztec: ni-chooka ‘I cry’, ti-chooka ‘you cry’, chooka ‘he/she cries’

Conclusion: 3 sg. marker is /ø/ (null morpheme).

4. Sometimes what is glossed with one morpheme in English is actually two morphemes in FL:

Spanish blanc-a 'white‘ - English : ‘white (Fem)’

Turkish haz-at 'house‘ - English: ‘house (Nom.)’

C. Morphological Parsing:1. Format:

Data most often given in rows and columns, where roots remain consistent across the row, and the affixal morpheme remains consistent down the column.

Tahiti

parau ‘speak’ parauraa ‘speaking”

haaparau ‘make speak’

parauhia ‘be spoken’

himene ‘sing’ himeneraa ‘singing’

haahimene ‘make sing’

himenehia‘be sung’

tomo ‘enter’ tomoraa ‘entering’

haatomo ‘make enter’

tomohia‘be entered’

C. Morphological Parsing:2. Analysis:

a. Scan down each column. As a first guess assume that the affix is the phonological material that the words have in common.

b. Scan across each row. As a first guess assume that the root is the phonological material that the words have in common.

Tahitiparau ‘speak’ parauraa

‘speaking”haaparau ‘make speak’

parauhia ‘be spoken’

himene ‘sing’ himeneraa ‘singing’

haahimene ‘make sing’

himenehia‘be sung’

tomo ‘enter’ tomoraa ‘entering’

haatomo ‘make enter’

tomohia‘be entered’

–ing (gerund) morpheme: _________Causative (make) morpheme: ________Passive (‘be’) morpheme: __________

Exercise: Morphological Parsing

singular

Exercise: Morphological Parsing

singular

D. Important notes:1. Alternations: One morpheme will sometimes have

two or more ‘allomorphs’.

2. When there are alternations:a. Assume alternation in affix

b. Assume alternation in root

c. Assume no alternation

3. Alternations must be explained:a. Choose one allomorph to be the underlying morpheme. This

is usually done by choosing the morpheme with the alternating sound which has the most varied or widest distribution.

b. Write a phonological rule or rules which derive the other allomorphs correctly. You must always make sure that your rule doesn’t ‘mess up’ other forms in the data.

Exercise: Morphological Alternation

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