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Summary Of: Phonology

it also has a phonology in the sense of a sound system... phonology describes the way sounds function within a given language or across languages to encode meaning... Current phonology can interface with disciplines such as... An important part of traditional forms of phonology have been studying which sounds can be grouped into distinctive units within a language... phonology studies how sounds alternate... s phonology reflects Yiddish elements... s phonology reflects Yiddish elements... s phonology reflects Yiddish elements... So one could also speak of a phonology of reading and writing... Phonology also includes topics such as... phonology was first recognized by Baudouin de Courtenay... Natural Phonology was a theory based on the publications of its proponent... phonology is based on a set of universal phonological processes which interact with one another... The principles of Natural Phonology were extended to... Augosegmental phonology later evolved into... representation for the theories of the organization of phonology as different as Lexical Phonology and... an overall architecture for phonology according to which languages choose a pronunciation of a word that best satisfies a list... both view phonology in terms of constraints on speakers and their production... Phonology in generative grammar... Phonology as functional phonetics... line phonology course dealing with English...

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Phonology (journal) | Linguistics | Theoretical linguistics | Phonetics | Morphology | Syntax | Lexis | Semantics | Lexical semantics | Statistical semantics | Structural semantics | Prototype semantics | Pragmatics | Applied linguistics | Language acquisition | Psycholinguistics | Sociolinguistics | Linguistic anthropology | Generative linguistics | Cognitive linguistics | Computational linguistics | Descriptive linguistics | Historical linguistics | Comparative linguistics | Etymology | Stylistics | Prescription | Corpus linguistics | History of linguistics | List of linguists | Unsolved problems | Greek | human language | syntax | vocabulary | linguistic analysis | syllable | linguistics | sound | languages | phonetics | perception | psycholinguistics | speech perception | aspirated | Thai | Quechua | phonemes | syllable | stress | accent | intonation | sign languages | modality | A diagram of the vocal tract | | The vowels of modern (Standard) Arabic and (Israeli) Hebrew from the phonological point of view. Note the intersection of the two circles—the distinction between short a, i and u is made by both speakers, but Arabic lacks the mid articulation of short vowels, while Hebrew lacks the distinction of vowel length. | | writing systems | phonemic principle | International Phonetic Alphabet | The vowels of modern (Standard) Arabic and (Israeli) Hebrew from the phonetic point of view. Note that the two circles are totally separate—none of the vowel-sounds made by speakers of one language are made by speakers of the other. One modern theory is that Israeli Hebrew's phonology reflects Yiddish elements, not Semitic ones. | | transcriptions | native speakers | phonemes | minimal pair | allophones | voiceless stops | aspirated | English | phonemes | minimal pairs | pronounced | aspirated | native speakers | historical linguistics | assimilation | elision | epenthesis | vowel harmony | tone | prosody | phonotactics | stress | intonation | ancient India | Sanskrit | grammarian | Pāṇini | 520 | 460 BC | Shiva Sutras | phoneme | morpheme | root | Aṣṭādhyāyī | morphology | Ferdinand de Saussure | structuralism | Jan Baudouin de Courtenay | Mikołaj Kruszewski | phoneme | allophony | morphophonology | Ferdinand de Saussure | Nikolai Trubetzkoy | Prague School | morphophonology | phonemics | archiphonemics | Roman Jakobson | twentieth century | Noam Chomsky | Morris Halle | The Sound Pattern of English | Generative | segments | distinctive features | Gunnar Fant | underlying representation | underlying representation | distinctive features | Geoffrey Pullum | morphology | Wolfgang U. Dressler | 1976 | John Goldsmith | autosegmental phonology | Optimality Theory | Government Phonology | principles | parameters | Alan Prince | Paul Smolensky | Optimality Theory | constraints | John McCarthy | Alan Prince | Government Phonology | Optimality Theory | Absolute neutralisation | Cherology | Phoneme | Morphophonology | Phonological hierarchy | Prosody (linguistics) | English phonology | ISBN 0-262-53047-3 | ISBN 0-262-03098-5 | ISBN 0-521-84879-2 | Firth, J. R. | autosegmental phonology | Jan Baudouin de Courtenay | Leonard Bloomfield | Franz Boas | Noam Chomsky | George N. Clements | John Rupert Firth | John Goldsmith | Morris Halle | Joan B. Hooper | Roman Jakobson | Daniel Jones | Jonathan Kaye (Linguist) | Paul Kiparsky | Mikołaj Kruszewski | Jerzy Kuryłowicz | André Martinet | John McCarthy | David Odden | Kenneth Pike | Alan Prince | Jerzy Rubach | Edward Sapir | Ferdinand de Saussure | Paul Smolensky | Henry Sweet | Nikolai Trubetzkoy | David Odden | John Goldsmith | ISBN 978-0199534203 | John Goldsmith | English | Macromedia Flash | v | d | world's languages | Abkhaz | Arabic | Belarusian | Bengali | Catalan | Czech | Danish | Dutch | English | Old | Australian | Esperanto | Finnish | French | Quebec | German | Bernese | Greek | Ancient | Koine | Gujarati | Hawaiian | Hebrew | Hindi-Urdu | Hungarian | Icelandic | Inuit | Irish | Italian | Japanese | Kiowa | Korean | Latin | Macedonian | Mahal | Mapudungun | Marathi | Navajo | Norwegian | Ojibwe | Persian | Polish | Portuguese | Proto-Indo-European | Romanian | Russian | Sesotho | Somali | Spanish | Swedish | Tagalog | Tamil | Taos | Turkish | Ubykh | Ukrainian | Vietnamese | Welsh | Yiddish | Zuni | Categories | Phonology | Linguistics | Oral communication |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Phonology".