Showing posts with label sounds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sounds. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Morpheme

Phonetics is the study of the sounds of language. The important or critical sounds of a language are called phonemes.

Once we have identified phonemes the next step is to put sounds together into meaningful units.

A unit of meaning is called morpheme, and it may include one phoneme or several.

It may also include such things as pitch and tone, which can change the meaning of a sound - every child knows from the tone of his or her mother’s voice whether she is angry or happy.

A morpheme then is a meaningful unit of sound or sounds in a particular language.

Must remember that language is a form of symbolic communication and that the meaning of the sounds in a language are arbitrary, being what ever the people who speak them agreed upon.

We say water while the French say eau (pronounced “oh”) and the Spanish say agua. All three words mean the same thing because the people who use them agreed that they do.

Morphemes should not be thought of in terms of written words; they are more than just the sounds those words represent.

There are morphemes in languages for which there is no writing. And some morphemes can have several forms, both writing and spoken.
Morpheme

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Phonetics

The study of the sounds of language is called phonetics. If you were suddenly placed in a situation in which you could not understand what was being said, the first you would do is try to recognize the sounds people were making.

The important or critical sounds of a language are called phonemes.

The study of phonemes also includes such factors as stress or accent, and pitch and tone. One of the reasons that we have so much trouble pronouncing foreign words is that they include phonemes that are not part of our own language.

One way we can tell the phonemes or important sounds in a language from ones that are not is by recognizing minimal pairs.

This is a way of separating those sounds that change meaning from those that do not. For instance, you can recognize where certain people come from by the way they speak English.

Some people have what we call a British accent and they sound different form people raised in New England, New York City or Georgia. Yet even though they sound different we can still understand what they say because their use of sounds does not change the meaning of their words.

The use of minimal pairs allows us to see what range of sounds can be used in a word without changing its meaning.
Phonetics

The most popular articles