1. Phonetics vs. phonology
Phonetics deals with the production of speech sounds by humans, often without prior knowledge of the language being spoken. Phonology is about patterns of sounds, especially different patterns of sounds in different languages, or within each language, different patterns of sounds in different positions in words etc.
2. Phonology as grammar of phonetic patterns
For example, the glottal stop [] occurs in both English and Arabic BUT ...
In English, at the beginning of a word, [] is a just way of beginning vowels, and does not occur with consonants. In the middle or at the end of a word, [] is one possible pronunciation of /t/ in e.g. "pat" [pa].
In Arabic, // is a consonant sound like any other (/k/, /t/ or whatever): [íktib] "write!", [daíia] "minute (time)", [a] "right".
4. Phonemes and allophones, or sounds and their variants
The vowels in the English words "cool", "whose" and "moon" are all similar
but slightly different. They are three variants or allophones of the /u/
phoneme. The different variants are dependent on the different contexts
in which they occur. Likewise, the consonant phoneme /k/ has different
variant pronunciations in different contexts. Compare:
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5. Phonological systems
Phonology is not just (or even mainly) concerned with categories or
objects
(such as consonants, vowels, phonemes, allophones, etc.) but is also crucially
about relations. For example, the English stops and fricatives can
be grouped into related pairs which differ in voicing and (for the stops)
aspiration:
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Different patterns are found in other languages. In Classical Greek
a three-way distinction was made between stops:
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Breathy voiced ("voiced aspirates") |
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(e.g. Arabic) |
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(e.g. Japanese) |
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a | a | |||||
(e.g. Tübatulabal) |
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(e.g. Italian) |
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a | a | |||||
(e.g. Bulgarian) |
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(e.g. Montenegrin) |
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a |
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How many degrees of vowel height are there in Bulgarian? On the face of things, it appears to be not very different from Tübatulabal, which has three heights: three high vowels, two mid vowels and one low vowel. But if we look more closely into Bulgarian phonology, we see that the fact that schwa is similar in height to /e/ and /o/ is coincidental: the distinction that matters in Bulgarian is /i/ vs. /e/, /u/ vs. /o/ and // vs. /a/, i.e. relatively high vs. relatively low. As evidence for this statement, note that while all six vowels may occur in stressed syllables, only /i/, /e/, // and /u/ occur in unstressed syllables.
7. Phonology as interpretation of phonetic patterns: Fang (Bantu:
Cameroon, Gabon, Equatorial Guinea)
Fang | English | Fang | English | |||
1) | etf- | shoulder | 7) | tm | branch | |
2) | vbi,v-bi | hippopotamus | 8) | bikq | back teeth | |
3) | ndv() | dam | 9) | eln | water tortoise | |
4) | kf-l | tortoise | 10) | fq | bag | |
5) | kf- | salt | 11) | t | neck | |
6) | kl | rope | 12) | osn | squirrel |
Vowels in corpus:
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?u expected but not found | |
e | o | ||
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Further reading
Lass, R. (1984) Phonology: an introduction to basic concepts. Cambridge University Press.
Jakobson, R. (1962) The phonemic concept of distinctive features. In A. Sovijärvi and P. Aalto, eds. Proceedings of the Fourth International Congress of Phonetic Sciences. Mouton & Co. 440-455.
Jakobson, R. and M. Halle (1956) Fundamentals of Language. Mouton.
Kelly, J. (1974) Close vowels in Fang. Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 37, 119-123.