User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
phonemes- Plural of phoneme
Extensive Definition
In human language, a phoneme is the
smallest posited structural unit that distinguishes meaning.
Phonemes are not the physical segments
themselves, but, in theoretical terms, cognitive abstractions or
categorizations of them.
An example of a phoneme is the /t/ sound in the words tip, stand, water, and cat.
(In transcription, phonemes are placed between slashes, as here.)
These instances of /t/ are considered to fall under the same sound
category despite the fact that in each word they are pronounced
somewhat differently. The difference may not even be audible to
native speakers. That is, a phoneme may encompass several
recognizably different speech sounds, called phones. In our example, the
/t/ in tip is aspirated,
[tʰ], while the /t/ in stand is not, [t].
(In transcription, speech sounds that are not phonemes are placed
in brackets, as here.) In many languages, such as Korean
and Spanish,
these phones are different phonemes: For example, /tol/ is "stone" in Korean, whereas /tʰol/ is "grain of rice". In Spanish, there is no
aspirated [tʰ], but the phone in American
English writer is similar to the Spanish r /ɾ/ and contrasts with Spanish /t/.
Phones that belong to the same phoneme, such as
[t] and [tʰ]
for English /t/, are called allophones. A common test to
determine whether two phones are allophones or separate phonemes
relies on finding minimal
pairs: words that differ by only the phones in question. For
example, the words tip and dip illustrate that [t] and [d] are separate
phonemes, /t/ and /d/, in English, whereas the lack of such a contrast
in Korean (/tʰata/ is pronounced
[tʰada], for example) indicates that in
this language they are allophones of a phoneme /t/.
In sign
languages, the basic elements of gesture and location were
formerly called cheremes
(or cheiremes), but general usage changed to phoneme. Tonic
phonemes are sometimes called tonemes, and timing phonemes
chronemes.
Some linguists (such as Roman
Jakobson) consider phonemes to be further decomposable into
features,
such features being the true minimal constituents of language.
Features overlap each other in time, as do suprasegmental phonemes
in oral language and many phonemes in sign languages.
Background and related ideas
In ancient India, the Sanskrit grammarian (c. 520–460 BC), in his text of Sanskrit grammar, the Shiva Sutras, originated the concepts of the phoneme, the morpheme and the root. The Shiva Sutras, traditionally prefaced to the , presents a system of phonemic notation in fourteen terse aphorisms. This notational system introduces different clusters of phonemes that serve special roles in the morphology of Sanskrit, and are referred to throughout the text.Around the 1st century CE, the definitions of
phoneme (oliyam) and alphabet (ezuththu) were discussed in the
Tolkāppiyam
concerning the Tamil
language.
The term phonème was reportedly first used by
Dufriche-Desgenettes in 1873, but it referred to only a sound of
speech. The term phoneme as an abstraction was developed by
the Polish linguist
Jan Niecisław Baudouin de Courtenay and his student Mikołaj
Kruszewski during 1875-1895. The term used by these two was
fonema, the basic unit of what they called psychophonetics. The
concept of the phoneme was elaborated in the works of Nikolai
Trubetzkoi and other of the Prague
School (during the years 1926-1935), as well as in that of
structuralists
like Ferdinand
de Saussure, Edward
Sapir, and Leonard
Bloomfield. Later, it was also used in generative
linguistics, most famously by Noam Chomsky
and Morris
Halle, and remains central to many accounts of the development
of modern of phonology. As a theoretical
concept or model, though, it has been supplemented and even
replaced by others.
Some languages make use of pitch
for phonemic distinction. In this case, the tones used are called
tonemes. Some languages
distinguish words made up of the same phonemes (and tonemes) by
using different durations of some elements, which are called
chronemes. However, not
all scholars working on languages with distinctive duration use
this term.
Usually, long vowels and consonants are represented
either by a length indicator or doubling of the symbol in
question.
In sign languages, phonemes may be classified as
Tab (elements of location, from Latin tabula), Dez (the hand shape,
from designator), Sig (the motion, from signation), and with some
researchers, Ori (orientation). Facial expressions and mouthing are
also phonemic.
Notation
A transcription that only indicates the different phonemes of a language is said to be phonemic. Such transcriptions are enclosed within virgules (slashes), / /; these show that each enclosed symbol is claimed to be phonemically meaningful. On the other hand, a transcription that indicates finer detail, including allophonic variation like the two English L's, is said to be phonetic, and is enclosed in square brackets, [ ].The common notation used in linguistics employs
virgules (slashes) (/ /) around the symbol that stands for the
phoneme. For example, the phoneme for the initial consonant sound
in the word "phoneme" would be written as /f/. In other words, the graphemes are
<ph>, but this digraph represents one sound
/f/. Allophones, more
phonetically specific descriptions of how a given phoneme might be
commonly instantiated, are often denoted in linguistics by the use
of diacritical or other marks added to the phoneme symbols and then
placed in square brackets ([ ]) to differentiate them from the
phoneme in slant brackets (/ /). The conventions of orthography are then kept
separate from both phonemes and allophones by the use of angle
brackets to enclose the spelling.
The symbols of the
International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) and extended sets adapted
to a particular language are often used by linguists to write
phonemes of oral languages, with the principle being one symbol
equals one categorical sound. Due to problems displaying some
symbols in the early days of the Internet, systems such as X-SAMPA and
Kirshenbaum
were developed to represent IPA symbols in plain text. As of 2004,
any modern web browser
can display IPA symbols (as long as the operating
system provides the appropriate fonts), and we use this system
in this article.
There are 2 published set of phonemic symbols for
sign language: SignWriting and
Stokoe
notation. SignWriting is capable of writing any sign language
and is currently used in over 38 countries. People
in these countries use SignWriting on a daily basis as a natural
writing system for education and recreation. Stokoe notation is
used for linguistic research and was originally developed for
American
Sign Language. Stokoe notation has since been applied to
British
Sign Language by Kyle and Woll, and to
Australian Aboriginal sign languages by Adam Kendon.
Examples
Examples of phonemes in the English
language would include sounds from the set of English
consonants, like /p/ and /b/. These two are most often written consistently
with one letter for each sound. However, phonemes might not be so
apparent in written English, such as when they are typically
represented with combined letters, called digraphs,
like <sh> (pronounced /ʃ/)
or <ch> (pronounced /tʃ/).
To see a list of the phonemes in the English
language, see
IPA for English.
Two sounds that may be allophones (sound variants
belonging to the same phoneme) in one language may belong to
separate phonemes in another language or dialect. In English, for
example, /p/ has aspirated and
non-aspirated allophones:aspirated as in /pɪn/, and non-aspirated as in /spɪn/. However, in many languages (e. g. Chinese),
aspirated /pʰ/ is a phoneme distinct from
unaspirated /p/. As another example,
there is no distinction between [r] and
[l] in Japanese;
there is only one /r/ phoneme, though it
has various allophones that can sound more like [l], [ɾ], or [r] to English speakers. The sounds [z] and [s] are distinct
phonemes in English, but allophones in Spanish.
The sounds [n] (as in run) and
[ŋ] (as in rung) are phonemes in English,
but allophones in Italian
and Spanish.
An important phoneme is the chroneme, a
phonemically-relevant extension of the duration a consonant or
vowel. Some languages or dialects such as Finnish
or Japanese
allow chronemes after both consonants and vowels. Others, like
Italian
or
Australian English use it after only one (in the case of
Italian, consonants; in the case of Australian, vowels).
Restricted phonemes
A restricted phoneme is a phoneme that can only occur in a certain environment: There are restrictions as to where it can occur. English has several restricted phonemes:- /ŋ/, as in sing, occurs only at the end of a syllable, never at the beginning (in many other languages, such as Swahili or Thai, /ŋ/ can appear word-initially).
- /h/ occurs only before vowels and at the beginning of a syllable, never at the end (a few languages, such as Arabic, or Romanian allow /h/ syllable-finally).
- In many American dialects with the cot-caught merger, /ɔ/ occurs only before /r/, /l/, and in the diphthong /ɔɪ/.
- In non-rhotic dialects, /r/ can only occur before a vowel, never at the end of a word or before a consonant.
- Under most interpretations, /w/ and /j/ occur only before a vowel, never at the end of a syllable. However, many phonologists interpret a word like boy as either /bɔɪ/ or /bɔj/.
Neutralization, archiphoneme, underspecification
Phonemes that are contrastive in certain
environments may not be contrastive in all environments. In the
environments where they don't contrast, the contrast is said to be
neutralized.
In English there are three nasal phonemes,
/m, n, ŋ/, as shown by the minimal
triplet,
However, with rare exceptions, these sounds are
not contrastive before plosives such as /p, t,
k/ within the same morpheme. Although all three
phones appear before plosives, for example in limp, lint, link,
only one of these may appear before each of the plosives. That is,
the /m, n, ŋ/ distinction is neutralized
before each of the plosives /p, t, k/:
- Only /m/ occurs before /p/,
- only /n/ before /t/, and
- only /ŋ/ before /k/.
Thus these phonemes are not contrastive in these
environments, and according to some theorists, there is no evidence
as to what the underlying representation might be. If we
hypothesize that we are dealing with only a single underlying
nasal, there is no reason to pick one of the three phonemes
/m, n, ŋ/ over the other two.
(In some languages there is only one phonemic
nasal anywhere, and due to obligatory assimilation, it surfaces as
[m, n, ŋ] in just these environments, so
this idea is not as far-fetched as it might seem at first
glance.)
In certain schools of phonology, such a
neutralized distinction is known as an archiphoneme (Nikolai
Trubetzkoy of the Prague
school is often associated with this analysis.). Archiphonemes
are often notated with a capital letter. Following this convention,
the neutralization of /m, n, ŋ/ before
/p, t, k/ could be notated as |N|, and
limp, lint, link would be represented as |lɪNp,
lɪNt, lɪNk|. (The |pipes| indicate underlying
representation.) Other ways this archiphoneme could be notated are
|m-n-ŋ|, , or |n*|.
Another example from American
English is the neutralization of the plosives /t, d/ following a stressed syllable. Phonetically,
both are realized in this position as [ɾ], a voiced alveolar
flap. This can be heard by comparing writer with rider (for the
sake of simplicity, Canadian
raising is not taken into account).
with the suffix
-er:
Thus, one cannot say whether the underlying
representation of the intervocalic consonant in either word is
/t/ or /d/
without looking at the unsuffixed form. This neutralization can be
represented as an archiphoneme |D|, in which case the underlying
representation of writer or rider would be |'ɻaɪDɚ|.
Another way to talk about archiphonemes involves
the concept of underspecification:
phonemes can be considered fully specified segments while
archiphonemes are underspecified segments. In Tuvan,
phonemic vowels are specified with the features of tongue height,
backness, and lip rounding. The archiphoneme |U| is an
underspecified high vowel where only the tongue height is
specified.
Whether |U| is pronounced as front or back and
whether rounded or unrounded depends on vowel
harmony. If |U| occurs following a front unrounded vowel, it
will be pronounced as the phoneme /i/; if
following a back unrounded vowel, it will be as an /ɯ/; and if following a back rounded vowel, it will
be an /u/. This can been seen in the
following words:
Not all phonologists accept the concept of
archiphonemes. Many doubt that it reflects how people process
language or control speech, and some argue that archiphonemes add
unnecessary complexity.
Phonological extremes
Of all the sounds that a human vocal tract can create, different languages vary considerably in the number of these sounds that are considered to be distinctive phonemes in the speech of that language. Ubyx and Arrernte have only two phonemic vowels, while at the other extreme, the Bantu language Ngwe has fourteen vowel qualities, twelve of which may occur long or short, for twenty-six oral vowels, plus six nasalized vowels, long and short, for thirty-eight vowels; while !Xóõ achieves thirty-one pure vowels—not counting vowel length, which it also has—by varying the phonation. Rotokas has only six consonants, while !Xóõ has somewhere in the neighborhood of seventy-seven, and Ubyx eighty-one. French has no phonemic tone or stress, while several of the Kam-Sui languages have nine tones, and one of the Kru languages, Wobe, has been claimed to have fourteen, though this is disputed. The total phonemic inventory in languages varies from as few as eleven in Rotokas to as many as 112 in !Xóõ (including four tones). These may range from familiar sounds like [t], [s], or [m] to very unusual ones produced in extraordinary ways (see: Click consonant, phonation, airstream mechanism). The English language itself uses a rather large set of thirteen to twenty-two vowels, including diphthongs, though its twenty-two to twenty-six consonants are close to average. (There are twenty-one consonant and five vowel letters in the English alphabet, but this does not correspond to the number of consonant and vowel sounds.)The most common vowel system consists of the five
vowels /i/, /e/, /a/, /o/, /u/. The most
common consonants are /p/, /t/, /k/, /m/,
/n/. Very few languages lack one of these: Arabic lacks
/p/, standard
Hawaiian lacks /t/, Mohawk
lacks /p/ and /m/, Hupa lacks
both /p/ and a simple /k/, colloquial Samoan
lacks /t/ and /n/, while Rotokas
and Quileute lack
/m/ and /n/.
While most of languages missing sounds have very small inventories,
Arabic, Quileute, and Hupa have quite complex consonant
systems.
See also
External links
- What is a phoneme? (SIL)
- What is an allophone? (SIL)
- What is a phone? (SIL)
- What is a phonetically similar segment? (SIL)
- What is a minimal pair? (SIL)
- What is complementary distribution? (SIL)
- What is an environment? (SIL)
- What is an contrast in identical environments? (SIL)
- What is an contrast in analogous environments? (SIL)
- Comparison of morpheme-morph-allomorph & phoneme-phone-allophone? (SIL)
- What is phonology? (SIL)
- Phoneme (Lexicon of Linguistics)
- Allophony (Lexicon of Linguistics)
- Transcription (Lexicon of Linguistics)
- Grapheme-Phoneme Conversion (Lexicon of Linguistics)
- Phoneme Restoration (Lexicon of Linguistics)
phonemes in Afrikaans: Foneem
phonemes in Asturian: Fonema
phonemes in Min Nan: Im-sò͘
phonemes in Breton: Fonem
phonemes in Bulgarian: Фонема
phonemes in Catalan: Fonema
phonemes in Chuvash: Фонема
phonemes in Czech: Foném
phonemes in Danish: Fonem
phonemes in German: Phonem
phonemes in Lower Sorbian: Fonem
phonemes in Modern Greek (1453-): Φώνημα
phonemes in Spanish: Fonema
phonemes in Esperanto: Fonemo
phonemes in Persian: واج
phonemes in French: Phonème
phonemes in Irish: Fóinéim
phonemes in Galician: Fonema
phonemes in Korean: 낱소리
phonemes in Upper Sorbian: Fonem
phonemes in Croatian: Fonem
phonemes in Ido: Fonemo
phonemes in Indonesian: Fonem
phonemes in Ossetian: Фонемæ
phonemes in Icelandic: Fónem
phonemes in Italian: Fonema
phonemes in Hebrew: פונמה
phonemes in Kurdish: Fonîm
phonemes in Latvian: Fonēma
phonemes in Hungarian: Fonéma
phonemes in Malay (macrolanguage): Fonem
phonemes in Dutch: Foneem
phonemes in Japanese: 音素
phonemes in Norwegian: Fonem
phonemes in Norwegian Nynorsk: Fonem
phonemes in Novial: Foneme
phonemes in Occitan (post 1500): Fonèma
phonemes in Polish: Fonem
phonemes in Portuguese: Fonema
phonemes in Romanian: Fonem
phonemes in Russian: Фонема
phonemes in Slovak: Fonéma
phonemes in Slovenian: Fonem
phonemes in Finnish: Foneemi
phonemes in Swedish: Fonem
phonemes in Tagalog: Ponema
phonemes in Turkish: Fonem
phonemes in Ukrainian: Фонема
phonemes in Walloon: Oyon (linwince)
phonemes in Chinese: 音位