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Syllables and Phonotactics Supplementary Readings Introduction and IPA Practice The Basics of Syllables Syllables and Phonotactics Syllabification Rule Syllabic Consonants Onsets Over Codas . . . . . . Syllables and Phonotactics

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Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Syllables and Phonotactics

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Supplementary Readings

The following readings have been posted to the Moodlecourse site:

I Contemporary Linguistics: Chapter 3 (pp. 77-84)I “Syllables” by Kyle Johnson

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

A Review of Where We Are

The Fundamental Question (for Linguists):What is the system of rules and mental representationsthat underlies out ability to speak and understand ahuman language?

I Last Unit: IPANotation that unambiguously represents the phonesof all human languages.

I This Unit: PhonologyRules that operate over those representations, andthereby affect how words are pronounced.

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Some Quick IPA Practice

First, let’s practice reading some IPA:

[maj b2lowni hæz @ f1ôst nejm Its ow Es si ej Aô]

(My bologna has a first name, it’s O-S-C-A-R)

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Some Quick IPA Practice

First, let’s practice reading some IPA:

[maj b2lowni hæz @ f1ôst nejm Its ow Es si ej Aô]

(My bologna has a first name, it’s O-S-C-A-R)

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Some Quick IPA Practice

Here’s another one:

[mInti plEZ1ôz Inklud pEptow bIzmAl ]

(Minty pleasures include Pepto Bismol)

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Some Quick IPA Practice

Here’s another one:

[mInti plEZ1ôz Inklud pEptow bIzmAl ]

(Minty pleasures include Pepto Bismol)

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Towards ‘Phonology’

IPA transcription represents some of our knowledge ofhow a word is pronounced:

I Phones making up the wordI Sequence in which those phones are produced

However, there is more to a word’s pronunciation thanjust this...

I There are also general rules governing Englishpronunciation.

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Introducing Syllables

Key ExampleWhen we pronounce ‘understanding’, we don’t pronounce(or perceive) it as a simple string of sounds...

I Rather, the phones are grouped together into ‘beats’

I These ‘beats’ making up the word give it a rhythm

I These ‘beats’ and rhythm come out naturally whenwe speak words slowly

I [2n . d1ô . stæn . diN] ‘understanding’I [pEp . tow . bIz . mAl] ‘Pepto Bismol’I [b2 . low . ni] ‘Bologna’

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Introducing SyllablesVocabulary:These ‘beats’ making up the sound-structure of the wordare called syllables.

Key Fact:For most English words, speakers only accept one way ofbreaking it up into syllables

I [2n . d1ô . stæn . diN] *[2 . nd1ôs . tænd . iN]

I [pEp . tow . bIz . mAl] *[pEpt . ow . bIzm . Al]

I [b2 . low . ni] *[b2l . own . i]

Conclusion:Part of knowing English is knowing how to divide wordsinto syllables

I So, this information is represented in our brains in someway.

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Introducing SyllablesVocabulary:These ‘beats’ making up the sound-structure of the wordare called syllables.

Key Fact:For most English words, speakers only accept one way ofbreaking it up into syllables

I [2n . d1ô . stæn . diN] *[2 . nd1ôs . tænd . iN]

I [pEp . tow . bIz . mAl] *[pEpt . ow . bIzm . Al]

I [b2 . low . ni] *[b2l . own . i]

Conclusion:Part of knowing English is knowing how to divide wordsinto syllables

I So, this information is represented in our brains in someway.

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Introducing SyllablesVocabulary:These ‘beats’ making up the sound-structure of the wordare called syllables.

Key Fact:For most English words, speakers only accept one way ofbreaking it up into syllables

I [2n . d1ô . stæn . diN] *[2 . nd1ôs . tænd . iN]

I [pEp . tow . bIz . mAl] *[pEpt . ow . bIzm . Al]

I [b2 . low . ni] *[b2l . own . i]

Conclusion:Part of knowing English is knowing how to divide wordsinto syllables

I So, this information is represented in our brains in someway.

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Towards Syllabification

Question:How is this information represented in our brains?

Wrong Hypothesis:Maybe we just memorize it on a word-by-word basis?

I When we learn a word like ‘bologna’, we learn:I The phones that compose it: [b2lowni]I The word’s syllabification: [b2 . low . ni]

Vocabulary:The way that a word is broken down into syllables iscalled syllabification.

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Towards Syllabification

Question:How is this information represented in our brains?

Wrong Hypothesis:Maybe we just memorize it on a word-by-word basis?

I When we learn a word like ‘bologna’, we learn:I The phones that compose it: [b2lowni]I The word’s syllabification: [b2 . low . ni]

Vocabulary:The way that a word is broken down into syllables iscalled syllabification.

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Towards Syllabification

Wrong Hypothesis:The syllabification of word is memorized on a case-by-casebasis.

Problem for This Hypothesis:English speakers know how to syllabify words they’ve neverheard spoken before.

Example:

I Read the following word to yourself silently: “badartogly”

I Say the word to yourself slowly, breaking it into syllables...

I I would bet that you syllabified it as follows:

I [ bæ . dAô . tA . gli ]

I I would bet that you didn’t syllabify it this way:

I [ bæd . Aôt . Ag . li ]

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Towards Syllabification

Wrong Hypothesis:The syllabification of word is memorized on a case-by-casebasis.

Problem for This Hypothesis:English speakers know how to syllabify words they’ve neverheard spoken before.

Example:

I Read the following word to yourself silently: “badartogly”

I Say the word to yourself slowly, breaking it into syllables...

I I would bet that you syllabified it as follows:

I [ bæ . dAô . tA . gli ]

I I would bet that you didn’t syllabify it this way:

I [ bæd . Aôt . Ag . li ]

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Towards Syllabification

Wrong Hypothesis:The syllabification of word is memorized on a case-by-casebasis.

Problem for This Hypothesis:English speakers know how to syllabify words they’ve neverheard spoken before.

Example:

I Read the following word to yourself silently: “badartogly”

I Say the word to yourself slowly, breaking it into syllables...

I I would bet that you syllabified it as follows:

I [ bæ . dAô . tA . gli ]

I I would bet that you didn’t syllabify it this way:

I [ bæd . Aôt . Ag . li ]

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Towards SyllabificationConclusion:Since you’d never heard “badartogly” before, yoursyllabification couldn’t have been memorized...

I So the ‘Wrong Hypothesis’ is wrong...

Right Hypothesis:English syllabification is based on a general rule.

I This rule tells you how to syllabify any imaginable word ofEnglish.

Vocabulary:Phonology = the study of the general rules that governhow words are pronounced in a language.

The Burning Question:What are the rules for syllabifying a word of English?

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Towards SyllabificationConclusion:Since you’d never heard “badartogly” before, yoursyllabification couldn’t have been memorized...

I So the ‘Wrong Hypothesis’ is wrong...

Right Hypothesis:English syllabification is based on a general rule.

I This rule tells you how to syllabify any imaginable word ofEnglish.

Vocabulary:Phonology = the study of the general rules that governhow words are pronounced in a language.

The Burning Question:What are the rules for syllabifying a word of English?

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Towards SyllabificationConclusion:Since you’d never heard “badartogly” before, yoursyllabification couldn’t have been memorized...

I So the ‘Wrong Hypothesis’ is wrong...

Right Hypothesis:English syllabification is based on a general rule.

I This rule tells you how to syllabify any imaginable word ofEnglish.

Vocabulary:Phonology = the study of the general rules that governhow words are pronounced in a language.

The Burning Question:What are the rules for syllabifying a word of English?

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Towards SyllabificationConclusion:Since you’d never heard “badartogly” before, yoursyllabification couldn’t have been memorized...

I So the ‘Wrong Hypothesis’ is wrong...

Right Hypothesis:English syllabification is based on a general rule.

I This rule tells you how to syllabify any imaginable word ofEnglish.

Vocabulary:Phonology = the study of the general rules that governhow words are pronounced in a language.

The Burning Question:What are the rules for syllabifying a word of English?

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotacticsThe Structure of Syllables

Phonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Before we can state the rule, we need to talk a bit moreabout the internal structure of syllables...

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotacticsThe Structure of Syllables

Phonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

The Structure of Syllables

I Every syllable is made up of (at most) three parts:

I Onset: the consonants that begin the syllable

I Nucleus: the sound in the middle of the syllable(usually a vowel)

I Coda: the consonants the end the syllable

I Syllables can differ in size:

I Some syllables do not have onsets (e.g. [it])

I Some syllables do not have codas (e.g. [ti])

I But, every syllable has a nucleus

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotacticsThe Structure of Syllables

Phonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

The Structure of Syllables

Here are some syllables, broken down into their parts:

Syllable Onset Nucleus Coda[bæn] [b] [æ] [n][bi] [b] [i] NONE[æn] NONE [æ] [n][stænd] [st] [æ] [nd][plæNk] [pl] [æ] [Nk][bOj] [b] [Oj] NONE[spôej] [spô] [ej] NONE[aj] NONE [aj] NONE

Note:Both parts of a diphthong count as being in the ‘nucleus’of the syllable.

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotacticsThe Structure of Syllables

Phonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Towards ‘Phonotactics’

Key Fact:Not every sequence of phones is a possible onset orcoda in English.

I Consider the following sequences of phones:I [mba . ka]I [Na . to]I [tsA]I [nukÙ]I [tæg . nIsp]

I Which one sounds most like an English word?

I You probably said [tæg . nIsp]I After all, it’s the only one that English speakers can

easily pronounce.

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotacticsThe Structure of Syllables

Phonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Towards ‘Phonotactics’

Key Fact:Not every sequence of phones is a possible onset orcoda in English.

I Consider the following sequences of phones:I [mba . ka]I [Na . to]I [tsA]I [nukÙ]I [tæg . nIsp]

I Which one sounds most like an English word?I You probably said [tæg . nIsp]

I After all, it’s the only one that English speakers caneasily pronounce.

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotacticsThe Structure of Syllables

Phonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Towards ‘Phonotactics’But why don’t those other words sound like English?

I [mba . ka]

I The first syllable starts with [mb]I No English word or syllable can start with [mb]I The sequence [mb] is not a possible onset

I [Na . to]

I The first syllable starts with [N]I No English word or syllable can start with [N]I The sequence [N] is not a possible onset

I [tsA]

I The first syllable starts with [ts]I No English word or syllable can start with [ts]I The sequence [ts] is not a possible onset

I [nukÙ]

I The first syllable ends with [kÙ]I No English word or syllable can end with [kÙ]I The sequence [kÙ] is not a possible coda

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotacticsThe Structure of Syllables

Phonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Towards ‘Phonotactics’But why don’t those other words sound like English?

I [mba . ka]I The first syllable starts with [mb]I No English word or syllable can start with [mb]I The sequence [mb] is not a possible onset

I [Na . to]

I The first syllable starts with [N]I No English word or syllable can start with [N]I The sequence [N] is not a possible onset

I [tsA]

I The first syllable starts with [ts]I No English word or syllable can start with [ts]I The sequence [ts] is not a possible onset

I [nukÙ]

I The first syllable ends with [kÙ]I No English word or syllable can end with [kÙ]I The sequence [kÙ] is not a possible coda

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotacticsThe Structure of Syllables

Phonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Towards ‘Phonotactics’But why don’t those other words sound like English?

I [mba . ka]I The first syllable starts with [mb]I No English word or syllable can start with [mb]I The sequence [mb] is not a possible onset

I [Na . to]I The first syllable starts with [N]I No English word or syllable can start with [N]I The sequence [N] is not a possible onset

I [tsA]

I The first syllable starts with [ts]I No English word or syllable can start with [ts]I The sequence [ts] is not a possible onset

I [nukÙ]

I The first syllable ends with [kÙ]I No English word or syllable can end with [kÙ]I The sequence [kÙ] is not a possible coda

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotacticsThe Structure of Syllables

Phonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Towards ‘Phonotactics’But why don’t those other words sound like English?

I [mba . ka]I The first syllable starts with [mb]I No English word or syllable can start with [mb]I The sequence [mb] is not a possible onset

I [Na . to]I The first syllable starts with [N]I No English word or syllable can start with [N]I The sequence [N] is not a possible onset

I [tsA]I The first syllable starts with [ts]I No English word or syllable can start with [ts]I The sequence [ts] is not a possible onset

I [nukÙ]

I The first syllable ends with [kÙ]I No English word or syllable can end with [kÙ]I The sequence [kÙ] is not a possible coda

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotacticsThe Structure of Syllables

Phonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Towards ‘Phonotactics’But why don’t those other words sound like English?

I [mba . ka]I The first syllable starts with [mb]I No English word or syllable can start with [mb]I The sequence [mb] is not a possible onset

I [Na . to]I The first syllable starts with [N]I No English word or syllable can start with [N]I The sequence [N] is not a possible onset

I [tsA]I The first syllable starts with [ts]I No English word or syllable can start with [ts]I The sequence [ts] is not a possible onset

I [nukÙ]I The first syllable ends with [kÙ]I No English word or syllable can end with [kÙ]I The sequence [kÙ] is not a possible coda

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotacticsThe Structure of Syllables

Phonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Phonotactic ConstraintsVocabulary:The rules that determine the possible onsets or codas arecalled phonotactics constraints (a.k.a phonotactics).

I ‘phono’ = sounds ; ‘tactic’ = arrangement(how the sounds can be arranged)

Key Fact:Different languages have different phonotacticconstraints.

I In Dholuo, [mb] and [N] are possible onsets:I [mba . ka] = storyI [Na . to] = person

I In Tlingit, [ts] is a possible onset, and [kÙ] a possiblecoda:

I [tsA] = sealI [nukÙ] = to do

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotacticsThe Structure of Syllables

Phonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Phonotactic ConstraintsVocabulary:The rules that determine the possible onsets or codas arecalled phonotactics constraints (a.k.a phonotactics).

I ‘phono’ = sounds ; ‘tactic’ = arrangement(how the sounds can be arranged)

Key Fact:Different languages have different phonotacticconstraints.

I In Dholuo, [mb] and [N] are possible onsets:I [mba . ka] = storyI [Na . to] = person

I In Tlingit, [ts] is a possible onset, and [kÙ] a possiblecoda:

I [tsA] = sealI [nukÙ] = to do

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotacticsThe Structure of Syllables

Phonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Phonotactics and Syllabification

Fun Fact:Phonotactic constraints play a major role in syllabification.

I What’s wrong with: *[2 . nd1ôs . tænd . iN]I [nd] is not a possible onset of English

(No word of English begins with [nd])

I Why not this: *[pEpt . ow . bIzm . Al]I [zm] is not a possible coda of English

(No word of English ends in [zm]])

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotacticsThe Structure of Syllables

Phonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Toward the Syllabification Rule

But, phonotactic constraints don’t explain everything...

I Why don’t we syllabify like this: *[b2l . own . i]I This syllabification is totally consistent with English

phonotactics.I [b2l] is a possible English syllableI [own] is a possible English syllableI [i] is a possible English syllable

I The answer will come from a concrete rule(algorithm) for syllabifying an English word...

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification RuleStep 1: Label Nuclei

Step 2: Label Onsets

Step 3: Label Codas

Step 4: Group Into Syllables

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

The Syllabification Algorithm

I There are four main steps to the ‘syllabification rule’(‘syllabification procedure’, ‘syllabification algorithm’)

I We will illustrate each step with our made-up words[bædAôtAgli] and [tægnIsp].

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification RuleStep 1: Label Nuclei

Step 2: Label Onsets

Step 3: Label Codas

Step 4: Group Into Syllables

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Step 1: Label the Nuclei

I Every syllable has a nucleus.I Key Fact: All vowels serve as syllabic nuclei.I So, Step One of our syllabification procedure is:

I Identify all the vowels in the word, and...I Label those vowels as ‘nuclei’ (N)

b æ d A ô t A g l i t æ g n I s p

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification RuleStep 1: Label Nuclei

Step 2: Label Onsets

Step 3: Label Codas

Step 4: Group Into Syllables

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Step 1: Label the Nuclei

I Every syllable has a nucleus.I Key Fact: All vowels serve as syllabic nuclei.I So, Step One of our syllabification procedure is:

I Identify all the vowels in the word, and...I Label those vowels as ‘nuclei’ (N)

b

N

æ d

N

A ô t

N

A g l

N

i t

N

æ g n

N

I s p

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification RuleStep 1: Label Nuclei

Step 2: Label Onsets

Step 3: Label Codas

Step 4: Group Into Syllables

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Step 2: Label the Onsets

Step 2:To the extent allowed by the phonotactics, gather up all thephones preceding a nucleus, and label them as an onset.

I Look at the consonants preceding each ‘N’

I Find the largest continuous sequence that Englishphonotactics allows to be an onset.

I Write an ‘O’ above that sequence and connect eachphone to that ‘O’ with a line.

b

N

æ d

N

A ô t

N

A g l

N

i t

N

æ g n

N

I s p

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification RuleStep 1: Label Nuclei

Step 2: Label Onsets

Step 3: Label Codas

Step 4: Group Into Syllables

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Step 2: Label the Onsets

Step 2:To the extent allowed by the phonotactics, gather up all thephones preceding a nucleus, and label them as an onset.

I Look at the consonants preceding each ‘N’

I Find the largest continuous sequence that Englishphonotactics allows to be an onset.

I Write an ‘O’ above that sequence and connect eachphone to that ‘O’ with a line.

O

b

N

æ d

N

A ô t

N

A g l

N

i t

N

æ g n

N

I s p

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification RuleStep 1: Label Nuclei

Step 2: Label Onsets

Step 3: Label Codas

Step 4: Group Into Syllables

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Step 2: Label the Onsets

Step 2:To the extent allowed by the phonotactics, gather up all thephones preceding a nucleus, and label them as an onset.

I Look at the consonants preceding each ‘N’

I Find the largest continuous sequence that Englishphonotactics allows to be an onset.

I Write an ‘O’ above that sequence and connect eachphone to that ‘O’ with a line.

O

b

N

æ

O

d

N

A ô t

N

A g l

N

i t

N

æ g n

N

I s p

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification RuleStep 1: Label Nuclei

Step 2: Label Onsets

Step 3: Label Codas

Step 4: Group Into Syllables

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Step 2: Label the Onsets

Step 2:To the extent allowed by the phonotactics, gather up all thephones preceding a nucleus, and label them as an onset.

I Look at the consonants preceding each ‘N’

I Find the largest continuous sequence that Englishphonotactics allows to be an onset.

I Write an ‘O’ above that sequence and connect eachphone to that ‘O’ with a line.

O

b

N

æ

O

d

N

A ô

O

t

N

A g l

N

i t

N

æ g n

N

I s p

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification RuleStep 1: Label Nuclei

Step 2: Label Onsets

Step 3: Label Codas

Step 4: Group Into Syllables

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Step 2: Label the Onsets

Step 2:To the extent allowed by the phonotactics, gather up all thephones preceding a nucleus, and label them as an onset.

I Look at the consonants preceding each ‘N’

I Find the largest continuous sequence that Englishphonotactics allows to be an onset.

I Write an ‘O’ above that sequence and connect eachphone to that ‘O’ with a line.

O

b

N

æ

O

d

N

A ô

O

t

N

A g l

N

i t

N

æ g n

N

I s p

I [ôt] is not a possible onset of English (no word starts with [ôt])

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification RuleStep 1: Label Nuclei

Step 2: Label Onsets

Step 3: Label Codas

Step 4: Group Into Syllables

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Step 2: Label the Onsets

Step 2:To the extent allowed by the phonotactics, gather up all thephones preceding a nucleus, and label them as an onset.

I Look at the consonants preceding each ‘N’

I Find the largest continuous sequence that Englishphonotactics allows to be an onset.

I Write an ‘O’ above that sequence and connect eachphone to that ‘O’ with a line.

O

b

N

æ

O

d

N

A ô

O

t

N

A g

O

l

N

i t

N

æ g n

N

I s p

I [ôt] is not a possible onset of English (no word starts with [ôt])

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification RuleStep 1: Label Nuclei

Step 2: Label Onsets

Step 3: Label Codas

Step 4: Group Into Syllables

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Step 2: Label the Onsets

Step 2:To the extent allowed by the phonotactics, gather up all thephones preceding a nucleus, and label them as an onset.

I Look at the consonants preceding each ‘N’

I Find the largest continuous sequence that Englishphonotactics allows to be an onset.

I Write an ‘O’ above that sequence and connect eachphone to that ‘O’ with a line.

O

b

N

æ

O

d

N

A ô

O

t

N

A

O

g l

N

i t

N

æ g n

N

I s p

I [ôt] is not a possible onset of English (no word starts with [ôt])

I [gl] is a possible onset of English (e.g. [glow])

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification RuleStep 1: Label Nuclei

Step 2: Label Onsets

Step 3: Label Codas

Step 4: Group Into Syllables

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Step 2: Label the Onsets

Step 2:To the extent allowed by the phonotactics, gather up all thephones preceding a nucleus, and label them as an onset.

I Look at the consonants preceding each ‘N’

I Find the largest continuous sequence that Englishphonotactics allows to be an onset.

I Write an ‘O’ above that sequence and connect eachphone to that ‘O’ with a line.

O

b

N

æ

O

d

N

A ô

O

t

N

A

O

g l

N

i

O

t

N

æ g n

N

I s p

I [ôt] is not a possible onset of English (no word starts with [ôt])

I [gl] is a possible onset of English (e.g. [glow])

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification RuleStep 1: Label Nuclei

Step 2: Label Onsets

Step 3: Label Codas

Step 4: Group Into Syllables

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Step 2: Label the Onsets

Step 2:To the extent allowed by the phonotactics, gather up all thephones preceding a nucleus, and label them as an onset.

I Look at the consonants preceding each ‘N’

I Find the largest continuous sequence that Englishphonotactics allows to be an onset.

I Write an ‘O’ above that sequence and connect eachphone to that ‘O’ with a line.

O

b

N

æ

O

d

N

A ô

O

t

N

A

O

g l

N

i

O

t

N

æ g

O

n

N

I s p

I [ôt] is not a possible onset of English (no word starts with [ôt])

I [gl] is a possible onset of English (e.g. [glow])

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification RuleStep 1: Label Nuclei

Step 2: Label Onsets

Step 3: Label Codas

Step 4: Group Into Syllables

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Step 2: Label the OnsetsStep 2:To the extent allowed by the phonotactics, gather up all thephones preceding a nucleus, and label them as an onset.

I Look at the consonants preceding each ‘N’

I Find the largest continuous sequence that Englishphonotactics allows to be an onset.

I Write an ‘O’ above that sequence and connect eachphone to that ‘O’ with a line.

O

b

N

æ

O

d

N

A ô

O

t

N

A

O

g l

N

i

O

t

N

æ g

O

n

N

I s p

I [ôt] is not a possible onset of English (no word starts with [ôt])

I [gl] is a possible onset of English (e.g. [glow])

I [gn] is not a possible onset of English (no word starts with [gn])

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification RuleStep 1: Label Nuclei

Step 2: Label Onsets

Step 3: Label Codas

Step 4: Group Into Syllables

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Finding the Onsets

I A major part of ‘Step 2’ is figuring out “Can thissequence of phones be an onset in English?”

I To answer this, either:I Use your own ‘intuitions’ as a native speaker

(if you are one)I Team up with a friend who is a native speaker

(if you aren’t one)

I Either way, you ask “can a word of English start withthis sequence of phones?”

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification RuleStep 1: Label Nuclei

Step 2: Label Onsets

Step 3: Label Codas

Step 4: Group Into Syllables

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Step 3: Label the Codas

Step 3:To the extent allowed by the phonotactics, gather up theremaining unlabeled phones following a nucleus, and labelthem as a coda.

I Look at the consonants following each ‘N’ (that aren’talready labeled as ‘O’s)

I Find the largest continuous sequence that Englishphonotactics allows to be a coda.

I Write a ‘C’ above that sequence and connect each phoneto that ‘C’ with a line.

O

b

N

æ

O

d

N

A ô

O

t

N

A

O

g l

N

i

O

t

N

æ g

O

n

N

I s p

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification RuleStep 1: Label Nuclei

Step 2: Label Onsets

Step 3: Label Codas

Step 4: Group Into Syllables

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Step 3: Label the Codas

Step 3:To the extent allowed by the phonotactics, gather up theremaining unlabeled phones following a nucleus, and labelthem as a coda.

I Look at the consonants following each ‘N’ (that aren’talready labeled as ‘O’s)

I Find the largest continuous sequence that Englishphonotactics allows to be a coda.

I Write a ‘C’ above that sequence and connect each phoneto that ‘C’ with a line.

O

b

N

æ

O

d

N

A

C

ô

O

t

N

A

O

g l

N

i

O

t

N

æ g

O

n

N

I s p

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification RuleStep 1: Label Nuclei

Step 2: Label Onsets

Step 3: Label Codas

Step 4: Group Into Syllables

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Step 3: Label the Codas

Step 3:To the extent allowed by the phonotactics, gather up theremaining unlabeled phones following a nucleus, and labelthem as a coda.

I Look at the consonants following each ‘N’ (that aren’talready labeled as ‘O’s)

I Find the largest continuous sequence that Englishphonotactics allows to be a coda.

I Write a ‘C’ above that sequence and connect each phoneto that ‘C’ with a line.

O

b

N

æ

O

d

N

A

C

ô

O

t

N

A

O

g l

N

i

O

t

N

æ

C

g

O

n

N

I s p

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification RuleStep 1: Label Nuclei

Step 2: Label Onsets

Step 3: Label Codas

Step 4: Group Into Syllables

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Step 3: Label the Codas

Step 3:To the extent allowed by the phonotactics, gather up theremaining unlabeled phones following a nucleus, and labelthem as a coda.

I Look at the consonants following each ‘N’ (that aren’talready labeled as ‘O’s)

I Find the largest continuous sequence that Englishphonotactics allows to be a coda.

I Write a ‘C’ above that sequence and connect each phoneto that ‘C’ with a line.

O

b

N

æ

O

d

N

A

C

ô

O

t

N

A

O

g l

N

i

O

t

N

æ

C

g

O

n

N

I

C

s p

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification RuleStep 1: Label Nuclei

Step 2: Label Onsets

Step 3: Label Codas

Step 4: Group Into Syllables

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Step 3: Label the CodasStep 3:To the extent allowed by the phonotactics, gather up theremaining unlabeled phones following a nucleus, and labelthem as a coda.

I Look at the consonants following each ‘N’ (that aren’talready labeled as ‘O’s)

I Find the largest continuous sequence that Englishphonotactics allows to be a coda.

I Write a ‘C’ above that sequence and connect each phoneto that ‘C’ with a line.

O

b

N

æ

O

d

N

A

C

ô

O

t

N

A

O

g l

N

i

O

t

N

æ

C

g

O

n

N

I

C

s p

I [sp] is a possible coda of English (e.g. [k2sp])

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification RuleStep 1: Label Nuclei

Step 2: Label Onsets

Step 3: Label Codas

Step 4: Group Into Syllables

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Finding the Codas

I As with Step 2, a major part of ‘Step 3’ is thequestion “Can this sequence of phones be a coda inEnglish?”

I To answer this question, either:I Use your own intuitions as a native speaker

(if you are one)I Team up with a friend who is a native speaker

(if you aren’t one)

I Either way, you ask “can a word of English end withthis sequence of phones?”

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification RuleStep 1: Label Nuclei

Step 2: Label Onsets

Step 3: Label Codas

Step 4: Group Into Syllables

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Step 4: Add the Syllable Lablels

Step 4:Group together the ‘O’s, ‘N’s and ‘C’s into syllables.

I Above each N, write a ‘σ ’ (for syllable), and draw a lineconnecting them.

I If there is an O preceding an N, connect that O to the σthat N is connected to.

I If there is a C following an N, connect that C to the σ thatthe N is connected to

O

b

N

æ

O

d

N

A

C

ô

O

t

N

A

O

g l

N

i

O

t

N

æ

C

g

O

n

N

I

C

s p

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification RuleStep 1: Label Nuclei

Step 2: Label Onsets

Step 3: Label Codas

Step 4: Group Into Syllables

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Step 4: Add the Syllable Lablels

Step 4:Group together the ‘O’s, ‘N’s and ‘C’s into syllables.

I Above each N, write a ‘σ ’ (for syllable), and draw a lineconnecting them.

I If there is an O preceding an N, connect that O to the σthat N is connected to.

I If there is a C following an N, connect that C to the σ thatthe N is connected to

O

b

σ

N

æ

O

d

σ

N

A

C

ô

O

t

σ

N

A

O

g l

σ

N

i

O

t

σ

N

æ

C

g

O

n

σ

N

I

C

s p

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification RuleStep 1: Label Nuclei

Step 2: Label Onsets

Step 3: Label Codas

Step 4: Group Into Syllables

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Step 4: Add the Syllable Lablels

Step 4:Group together the ‘O’s, ‘N’s and ‘C’s into syllables.

I Above each N, write a ‘σ ’ (for syllable), and draw a lineconnecting them.

I If there is an O preceding an N, connect that O to the σthat N is connected to.

I If there is a C following an N, connect that C to the σ thatthe N is connected to

σ

O

b

N

æ

σ

O

d

N

A

C

ô

σ

O

t

N

A

σ

O

g l

N

i

σ

O

t

N

æ

C

g

σ

O

n

N

I

C

s p

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification RuleStep 1: Label Nuclei

Step 2: Label Onsets

Step 3: Label Codas

Step 4: Group Into Syllables

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Step 4: Add the Syllable Lablels

Step 4:Group together the ‘O’s, ‘N’s and ‘C’s into syllables.

I Above each N, write a ‘σ ’ (for syllable), and draw a lineconnecting them.

I If there is an O preceding an N, connect that O to the σthat N is connected to.

I If there is a C following an N, connect that C to the σ thatthe N is connected to

σ

O

b

N

æ

σ

O

d

N

A

C

ô

σ

O

t

N

A

σ

O

g l

N

i

σ

O

t

N

æ

C

g

σ

O

n

N

I

C

s p

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification RuleStep 1: Label Nuclei

Step 2: Label Onsets

Step 3: Label Codas

Step 4: Group Into Syllables

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Study Exercise:

I At home, try running this procedure on the followingwords:

I [2nd1ôstændiN] (“understanding”)I [pEptow bIzmAl] (“Pepto Bismol”)I [b2lowni] (“Bologna”)

I Confirm that our rule will predict the correctsyllabification for these words.

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification RuleStep 1: Label Nuclei

Step 2: Label Onsets

Step 3: Label Codas

Step 4: Group Into Syllables

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Summing Up

What We’ve Done So Far:

I We’ve laid out a rule that will correctly syllabifyEnglish words.

I This rule, then, is one (very small) part of an answerto our ‘fundamental question’.

The Fundamental Question (for Linguists):What is the system of rules and mental representationsthat underlies out ability to speak and understand ahuman language?

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Problem: Syllabic Consonants

But, there’s a problem for our syllabification rule...

I If we follow this rule, the only possible nuclei we willget will be vowels

I However, although every vowel is a nucleus...

I ...some nuclei are not vowels.

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Syllabic Consonants in EnglishKey Fact:The consonants [l], [n], and [ô], can be nuclei in English.

Words With Consonants as Syllabic Nuclei:

I “kitten” [kI . tn]

I “cuddle” [k2 . dl]

I “banner” [bæ . nô]

Question: Why do we say they are the nucleus of a syllable?

Answer: We hear these words as having two syllables, butthere is no ‘second vowel’ before the final consonant.

I “kitten” and “cuddle”: tongue never leaves alveolar ridgeafter [t]/[d].

I “banner”: you go immediately from [n] to [ô], with nointervening vowel

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Syllabic Consonants in EnglishKey Fact:The consonants [l], [n], and [ô], can be nuclei in English.

Words With Consonants as Syllabic Nuclei:

I “kitten” [kI . tn]

I “cuddle” [k2 . dl]

I “banner” [bæ . nô]

Question: Why do we say they are the nucleus of a syllable?

Answer: We hear these words as having two syllables, butthere is no ‘second vowel’ before the final consonant.

I “kitten” and “cuddle”: tongue never leaves alveolar ridgeafter [t]/[d].

I “banner”: you go immediately from [n] to [ô], with nointervening vowel

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Syllabic Consonants in English

Vocabulary:When a consonant serves as a syllabic nucleus, it is saidto be a syllabic consonant

IPA Representation:In IPA, syllabic consonants are indicated by putting a littlevertical line beneath them:

I “kitten” [ kI . tn"

]

I “cuddle” [ k2 . dl"

]

I “banner” [ bæ . nô"

]

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Syllabic Consonants in English

It seems, then, that the real syllabification rule for Englishoutputs representations like these:

σ

O

k

N

I

σ

O

t

N

n"

σ

O

k

N

2

σ

O

d

N

l"

σ

O

b

N

æ

σ

O

n

N

ô"

The Problem:

I Our current rule won’t make representations like thisI so, we have to fix our rule...I ... but it goes beyond ‘201’ to explain how.

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

One Last Mystery

Question:Why don’t we syllabify “bologna” like this: *[b2l . own . i]

I This syllabification is totally consistent with Englishphonotactics.

I [b2l] is a possible English syllableI [own] is a possible English syllableI [i] is a possible English syllable

The answer comes from an important feature of our rule...

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Onsets Over CodasA Prediction of Our Rule:If phonotactics allow a consonant to be either an onset or acoda, then it will be an onset.

I [b2 . low . ni], not *[b2l . own . i]

Question: How, exactly, does our rule predict this?

Answer: Because our rule determines the onsets first.

I Step 2:Gather up all the consonants that can form an onset, andlabel them as such.

I Step 3:Of the remaining consonants, gather up all those that canform a coda, and label them as such.

Since our algorithm creates the onsets first......the codas are made out of only those consonantsthat couldn’t form onsets...

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Onsets Over CodasA Prediction of Our Rule:If phonotactics allow a consonant to be either an onset or acoda, then it will be an onset.

I [b2 . low . ni], not *[b2l . own . i]

Question: How, exactly, does our rule predict this?

Answer: Because our rule determines the onsets first.

I Step 2:Gather up all the consonants that can form an onset, andlabel them as such.

I Step 3:Of the remaining consonants, gather up all those that canform a coda, and label them as such.

Since our algorithm creates the onsets first......the codas are made out of only those consonantsthat couldn’t form onsets...

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Illustrative Derivation

Let’s see in detail how this works, by using our algorithmto syllabify “bologna”

Step 1:Label every vowel as a nucleus.

b 2 l ow n i

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Illustrative Derivation

Let’s see in detail how this works, by using our algorithmto syllabify “bologna”

Step 1:Label every vowel as a nucleus.

b 2 l ow n i

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Illustrative Derivation

Let’s see in detail how this works, by using our algorithmto syllabify “bologna”

Step 1:Label every vowel as a nucleus.

b 2 l ow n i

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Illustrative Derivation

Let’s see in detail how this works, by using our algorithmto syllabify “bologna”

Step 1:Label every vowel as a nucleus.

b

N

2 l

N

ow n

N

i

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Illustrative Derivation

Let’s see in detail how this works, by using our algorithmto syllabify “bologna”

Step 2:To the extent allowed by the phonotactics, gather up all thephones preceding a nucleus, and label them as an onset.

b

N

2 l

N

ow n

N

i

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Illustrative Derivation

Let’s see in detail how this works, by using our algorithmto syllabify “bologna”

Step 2:To the extent allowed by the phonotactics, gather up all thephones preceding a nucleus, and label them as an onset.

O

b

N

2

O

l

N

ow

O

n

N

i

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Illustrative DerivationLet’s see in detail how this works, by using our algorithmto syllabify “bologna”

Step 2:To the extent allowed by the phonotactics, gather up all thephones preceding a nucleus, and label them as an onset.

O

b

N

2

O

l

N

ow

O

n

N

i

I Notice that on this step, we are forced to group [l] and [n]

as onsetsI The rule won’t let us “wait” to Step 3 to group them as

codas

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Illustrative DerivationLet’s see in detail how this works, by using our algorithmto syllabify “bologna”

Step 3:To the extent allowed by the phonotactics, gather up theremaining unlabeled phones following a nucleus, and labelthem as a coda.

O

b

N

2

O

l

N

ow

O

n

N

i

I Nothing happens at this step, since there are no‘remaining unlabeled phones’.

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Illustrative DerivationLet’s see in detail how this works, by using our algorithmto syllabify “bologna”

Step 3:To the extent allowed by the phonotactics, gather up theremaining unlabeled phones following a nucleus, and labelthem as a coda.

O

b

N

2

O

l

N

ow

O

n

N

i

I Nothing happens at this step, since there are no‘remaining unlabeled phones’.

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Illustrative Derivation

Let’s see in detail how this works, by using our algorithmto syllabify “bologna”

Step 4:Group together the ‘O’s, ‘N’s and ‘C’s into syllables.

O

b

N

2

O

l

N

ow

O

n

N

i

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Illustrative Derivation

Let’s see in detail how this works, by using our algorithmto syllabify “bologna”

Step 4:Group together the ‘O’s, ‘N’s and ‘C’s into syllables.

O

b

σ

N

2

O

l

σ

N

ow

O

n

σ

N

i

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Illustrative Derivation

Let’s see in detail how this works, by using our algorithmto syllabify “bologna”

Step 4:Group together the ‘O’s, ‘N’s and ‘C’s into syllables.

σ

O

b

N

2

σ

O

l

N

ow

σ

O

n

N

i

Syllables andPhonotactics

SupplementaryReadings

Introduction andIPA Practice

The Basics ofSyllables

Syllables andPhonotactics

Syllabification Rule

SyllabicConsonants

Onsets OverCodas

. . . . . .

Summing Up:

I There is a general ‘preference’ for consonants to beonsets, rather than codas.

I That is, if the phonotactics allow a particularconsonant to be either an onset or a coda, then it willbe an onset.

I [b2 . low . ni], not *[b2l . own . i]

I Our syllabification algorithm captures this fact, byordering the labeling of onsets before the codas.

I The codas will only be made out of those consonantsthat couldn’t be onsets.