HW 2 Key

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Homework #2 Key

Phonology: pg 108 ex a&b; pg 115 ex 1&2; File 4.5: 1.1, 2.1, 3.1

Page 108
Exercise a (6 points)

[mɪska] [mɪʃka]
[sapka] [ʃapka]
[sɪla] [ʃɪla]
[sum] [ʃum]
[sudɪ] [sjudɪ]
[posadu] [posjadu]

Exercise b (1 points)

[lɪs] [lɪsj] [lɪʃ]

Page 115
Exercise 1 (20 points)
a. [t],[d],[s],[z]
b. [b],[m],[w], [v]
c. [k],[g]
d. [ɵ],[ð]
e. [i],[u]
f. [æ],[a]
g. [j]
h. [z],[ʒ],[dʒ]

Exercise 2 (6 points)
a. liquids
b. voiceless fricatives
c. glides
d. high tense vowels
e. bilabial oral stops
f. alveolar sonorants

File 4.5

1.1 Sindhi (24 points)

• In Sindhi, [p], [ph], and [b] are (allophones of) separate phonemes. The evidence
comes from the below minimal set:
[pənu] ‘leaf’ [phənu] ‘hood of snake’ [bənu] ‘forest’
/p/ /ph/ /b/
↓ ↓ ↓
[p] [ph] [b]

• In English the three phones are organized into two phonemes. [p] and [b] are
separate phonemes as the below minimal set illustrates: [pæt] [bæt]

On the other hand, [p] and [ph] are allophones of the same phoneme. The
evidence comes from examining a sample of English data:

[phæt] [spæt]
[phəθɛtɪk] [phap]
[phasɪbəl] [meɪpəl]

/p/

[p]elsewhere [ph] when in word-initial position

• [p] and [ph] are in complementary distribution in English, but they are in
contrastive distribution in Sindhi.
• [p] and [b] are in contrastive distribution in both Sindhi and English.

2.1 Tojolabal (16 points)

• The near minimal pair [kʔak] ‘white’ and [ʔakʔ] ‘read’ suggests that [k] and [kʔ]
are separate phonemes; however, to confirm this, we might look at their
environment to see whether a pattern can be discovered.
• List of environments:
[k] [kʔ]
# __ i # __ i
# __ o # __ a
a __ a a __ a
a __ # # __ u
o __ t
s __ u
i __ a

• The above list confirms that [k] and [kʔ] can occur in the same environment, and
their presence is not predictable. The conclusion is that [k] and [kʔ] are in
contrastive distribution in Tojolabal.
3.1 Greek (36 points)

• [x] and [k] are separate phonemes in Greek. The evidence comes from the
minimal pair: [kanο] ‘do’ & [xanο] ‘lose

• [c] and [ç] are separate phonemes. The evidence comes from the below minimal
pair: [ceri] ‘candle’ & [çeri] ‘hand’

• The following relationships remain unclear at this point:


[x] and [c]
[x] and [ç]
[k] and [c]
[k] and [ç]

• First, we will make a list of environments of the phones:

[x] [ç] [k] [c]


# __ a # __ i # __ a # __ i
# __ ο # __ e # __ ο # __ e
# __ r ο __ i # __ r ο __ i
# __ u # __ u

• The above list shows that [ç] and [c] occur before front vowels. In fact, we have
velar sounds that are “fronted” (the place of articulation has moved from the
velum to the palate which is more front) when they precede front vowels. In other
words, this is a case of assimilation. As a result, there are two phonemes that are
organized in the following way:

[x] [k]

[x] elsewhere [ç] before front vowels [k] elsewhere [c]elsewhere

[-voice, +velar, +stop] → [+palatal] / __ [+vowel, +front]


[-voice, +velar, +fricative] → [+palatal] / __ [+vowel, +front]

• Notice that the above-mentioned rules can be combined into one single rule that
affects all voiceless velar consonants:

Palatalization rule:
[-voice, +velar] → [+palatal] / ___ [+vowel, +front]
• [x] and [ç] are allophones of the same phoneme and in complementary
distribution. [k] and [c] are allophones of the same phoneme, and in
complementary distribution.
• [x] and [k] are in contrastive distribution.

3.3 Ukranian (practice problem)

• The three pairs of sounds in are [k] & [tʃ]; [x] & [ʃ]; [ɦ] & [ʒ]
• Palatalization is the phonological process at work here
• The conditioning environment for the change is [e], which is a front vowel and
causes the consonant to front as well.

2.3 Canadian French (practice problem)

• First we will make a list of the environments of each sound”

[t] [ts]
#__a u__i
#__ɛ #__i
#__e #__ɪ
#__r #__y
ʏ__# #__ʏ

• This list shows that [ts] occurs before [i], [ɪ], [y] and [ʏ], all high front vowels.
[t] seems to occur elsewhere
• Therefore [t] and [ts] are in complementary distribution and allophones of the
same phoneme.
• Since [t] has a more general environment, we can conclude that it is the
underlying phoneme.
• The rules for the distribution of these allophones would be as follows:

[-voice
+alveolar → [+affricate] / __ [+high, +front]
+frictive]

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