480 likes | 2.27k Views
History of Phonology. with an emphasis on recent history. 1900-1930. Development of Phonetics are a special branch of linguistics Unlike historical linguistics, also concerned with sounds through its preoccupation with sound change, phonetics was firmly rooted in synchronic analysis
E N D
History of Phonology with an emphasis on recent history
1900-1930 • Development of Phonetics are a special branch of linguistics • Unlike historical linguistics, also concerned with sounds through its preoccupation with sound change, phonetics was firmly rooted in synchronic analysis • Articulatory phonetics • Acoustic phonetics
new tools • spectrograph • X-ray photo’s (and films) • sound recordings
Phonology • Off-shoot of phonetics • Strictly devoted to those aspects of sound structure which are linguistically relevant • E.g. pitch differences related to tone or accent are phonologically important, pitch differences related to sex are not • First International Congress of Linguists in The Hague in 1928 is often viewed as the beginning of phonology, set off by
Prague school • definition of phoneme • importance of binary oppositions • marked vs unmarked member of pair • neutralization • languages are ‘systems’: you can’t take out one thing and study it separately – that way you lose information about various contrasts within the language
Jakobson’s accomplishments • wide-ranging scholar • worked on Russian case, phonological theory, poetics, and numerous other topics • introduced the Prague school to the USA • integrated work on language acquisition and language loss by aphasia in linguistic theory
Generative phonology • Morris Halle and Noam Chomsky started working on phonology in the 1950’s • Culminating in The Sound Pattern of English (1968)
Morris Halle, continued • student of Roman Jakobson • likewise of Russian (actually, Latvian) descent • worked primarily on Slavic and English • in his The Sound Pattern of Russian, Halle attacked the classical phoneme • with Chomsky, developed generative phonology (1956-1968; after 1968 Chomsky stopped doing phonology)
The Sound Pattern of English 1968 • Authors: Chomsky and Halle • Should have been: Halle and Chomsky • Important for its formalization of phonological representations, rules, and its methodology • Discusses many major issues in the phonology of English, including phonotactics, phonological rules, and stress assignment in underived, derived and compound words
Segments • defined as a “bundle of features” • e.g.: feature-1 + • feature-2 - • feature-3 + • feature-4 - • etc. Features have a standard phonetic interpretation, in terms of articulation (Jakobson had proposed an acoustic interpretation)
One exception to binary features • To capture four levels of stress, Chomsky and Halle used numeral values for stress features: [1 stress], [2 stress], [3 stress] and [4 stress] • So features, in SPE, come in 2 types: • boolean valued features (+/-) • numerically valued features
Rules • context-sensitive rules • A → B / C __ D • however, not involving whole segments, but features, or sets of features • many new notational devices were introduced, to formulate rules: α notation, curly brace notation, etc.
Methodology • economy basic principle • feature-counting evaluation metric • highly abstract underlying forms • complex derivations, involving the phonological cycle • phonotactics done by rule • synchronic analysis became a mirror of diachronic analysis in SPE
E.g. • Dutch has no diphtongs before /r/ • Historical account: diphtongization never took place before /r/ • Possible synchronic account: assume diphtongs are underlying monophongs, and diphtongize them unless followed by /r/ • Advantages: reduces the inventory of underlying segments (economy), and derives the phonotactic generalization
Disadvantages • Need to use exception features, e.g. for loans that came into the language after the sound change (minuut, titel) • Mixes up diachrony and synchrony • Overly abstract: learnability issue
Reactions to SPE • immediate and wide following • many phonologists embraced the methodology, notation and ideas, to describe phonological problems in a variety of languages, thus creating the field of generative phonology
However, there was also an immediate backlash • Abstractness: natural phonology (David Stampe, Patricia Donegan, Theo Vennemann, Joan Bybee (Hooper)) • Morphology: new separation of word-based sound regularities from general sound regularities (Mark Aronoff, Paul Kiparsky) • Autosegmental phonology: explosion of the segment (John Goldsmith, Nick Clements, etc.)
Abstractness • Need for absolute neutralization? • Absolute neutralization: underlying form never shows up as surface form • In SPE, this was a common phenomenon • Learnability problem: only if children use the same methodology as Chomsky and Halle, will they arrive at the same underlying forms
Autosegmental phonology • originated in the study of tone languages, where it was noted that • tonal features (like High Tone) may stretch over many segments, sometimes entire words • and when they change, e.g. through assimilation, all segments bearing the tone change
Suggestion (Goldsmith) • get rid of the absolute slicing hypothesis • put tonal features on a separate level (called tier), and then connect them to the various segments bearing the tonal features • allow the connection to be not one-to-one, but many-to-many
So, • One segment may bear two tones (e.g. Hi-Lo, heard as falling tone and Lo-Hi, heard as rising) • And one tone may be connected to many segments
Notation Hi Lo Tonal tier: C Segmental tier V C
Floating tones • are tonal features not (yet) associated with a segment • can be linked in the course of a derivation • may be separate morpheme • or originate through deletion of a segment