المرجع الالكتروني للمعلوماتية
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Syllabic consonants  
  
94   08:39 صباحاً   date: 2024-10-30
Author : Peter Roach
Book or Source : English Phonetics and Phonology A practical course
Page and Part : 111-13


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Date: 2024-10-28 85
Date: 2024-10-30 88
Date: 2024-10-28 90

Syllabic consonants

A final analysis problem that we will consider is: how to deal with syllabic consonants. It has to be recognized that syllabic consonants are a problem: they are phonologically different from their non-syllabic counterparts. How do we account for the following minimal pairs?

Syllabic                                          Non-syllabic

'coddling'      kɒdḷɪŋ                     'codling'      kɒdlɪŋ

'Hungary'      hΛŋgṛi                     'hungry'      hΛŋgri

 

One possibility is to add new consonant phonemes to our list. We could invent the phonemes ḷ, ṛ, ṇ, etc. The distribution of these consonants would be rather limited, but the main problem would be fitting them into our pattern of syllable structure. For a word like 'button' bΛtṇ or 'bottle' bɒtḷ, it would be necessary to add ṇ, ḷ to the first post-final set; the argument would be extended to include the r in 'Hungary'. But if these consonants now form part of a syllable-final consonant cluster, how do we account for the fact that English speakers hear the consonants as extra syllables? The question might be answered by saying that the new phonemes are to be classed as vowels. Another possibility is to set up a phoneme that we might name syllabicity, symbolized with the mark Then the word 'codling' would consist of the following six phonemes: k- ɒ-d-l-ɪ-ŋ, while the word 'coddling' would consist of the following seven phonemes:

k -  ɒ  - d - l and simultaneously , — ɪ — ŋ. This is superficially an attractive theory, but the proposed phoneme is nothing like the other phonemes we have identified up to this point - putting it simply, the syllabic mark doesn't have any sound.

 

Some phonologists maintain that a syllabic consonant is really a case of a vowel and a consonant that have become combined. Let us suppose that the vowel is a. We could then say that, for example, 'Hungary' is phonemically hVNgarI while 'hungry' is hVNgri; it would then be necessary to say that the a vowel phoneme in the phonemic representation is not pronounced as a vowel, but instead causes the following consonant to become syllabic. This is an example of the abstract view of phonology where the way a word is represented phonologically may be significantly different from the actual sequence of sounds heard, so that the phonetic and the phonemic levels are quite widely separated.