Linguistics
Which of these options is an example of a natural class of voiceless fricatives in English?
/f, s, θ, ∫, h/
When two sounds can never occur in the same environment, those two sounds are in ____________________.
Complementary distribution
When two sounds occur in the same environment and make a difference of meaning, those sounds are in ______________.
Contrastive distribution
A linguist would say English has 5 vowels -- a, e, i, o and u.
False
A linguist would say that [s] is a soft sound.
False
A linguist would say that the sound in 'beet' or 'bait' are long vowels.
False
Consider the sounds [e] vs. [ɑ] in [tometo] vs. [tomɑto]. The sounds are in contrastive distribution in a minimal pair.
False
IPA only works with Standard English. We can't use it to transcribe the different sounds of different dialects.
False
The allophones of a phoneme contrast. They occur in contrastive environments.
False
The words 'thin' and 'think' begin with two consonant sounds [t] and [h].
False
This is a hard one! Slow up! The sound in the word 'gym' is a velar stop
False
When we pronounce words, we pronounce each sound individually and no sound in a word influences the way the sounds around it are pronounced.
False
[e] has the sound of the vowel as in the word 'bet'.
False
The following word pairs illustrate what kind of distribution: [poteto] vs. [potɑto] [iðər] vs. [ɑjðər] [niðər] vs. [nɑjðər]
Free variation
When two sounds occur in the same environment and do NOT make a difference of meaning, those sounds are in ______________.
Free variation
The plural morpheme is phonetically conditioned. It's an example of morphophonology -- that is, the shape of the morpheme is influenced by the phonetic envirionment. Question: Which word below would take the plural allomorph [ɪz]?
House
A set of ___________ in a language is the set of distinctive, or contrastive, sounds in that language.
Phonemes
Alveolar, bilabial, and velar sounds are classified according to
Place of articulation
Allophones of a phoneme are the different realizations, or pronunciations, of a phoneme.
True
The surface form of a word is the pronunciation of a word as a result of the application of phonological rules to the underlying form.
True
Which of the following sounds is a stop?
[b]
Which option below is the best transcription for the word bright?
[braɪt] or [brajt]
Which of the following sounds is a fricative?
[f]
Which of the following sounds is velar?
[g]
Which of the following sounds is bilabial?
[p]
Which of the following sounds is voiceless?
[s]
Paying special attention to the way aspiration is applied to voiceless stops in English, which option below is the best transcription for the word spit?
[spIt]
Which of the following vowels is a lax vowel?
[ɛ]
Assume that the past tense morpheme has the following underlying form: /d/. When we say the words wish, kiss, talk, strip, preach in the past tense they sound like they have a [t] on the end. This fact represents what phonological process?
assimilation to voicing of the preceding consonant
As a result of the English allophonic rule that puts aspiration on voiceless stops in certain contexts, which of the following words is pronounced with an aspirated /p/?
pale
Consider the following sound alternation: reduce --> reduction Give the IPA symbol for the sound corresponding to 'c' in reduce and the 'c' in reduction
s, k
Which of the following pairs of words is an example of a minimal pair?
sleep and sleet
The sound [p] in [pin] is distinguished by the sound [b] in [bin] by what feature?
voicing
Which word below would take the past tense allomorph [t]?
walk
Which word is transcribed as [jæm]?
yam
In the dialects unit this semester, we learned about the "pin/pen" merger, in which the vowel sounds in pin and pen merge into one sound, whereas in bit and bet they remain distinct. Question: Using the IPA, transcribe the vowel sounds in 1) bit and 2) bet. These are the vowel sounds that would change in the pin/pen merger. Your answer should maintain that order of the sounds. The sound in bit and the sound in bet.
ɪ, ɛ
Which pair contains vowels that are both high and lax?
ɪ, ʊ