Ladefoged, P., 2001. A course in phonetics.. Fourth edition.
2.2.Dissimilation and hepatology in phonetics.
Dissimilation is a general term for a process in which two adjacent sounds are not similar in phonetics and historical linguistics. Compared to assimilation. According to Patrick Bye, the term separation “entered the field of phonography from rhetoric in the 19th century, where it was used to describe the style change required for good speech” (Blackwell’s Addition to Phonology, 2011). .
DISSIMILATION AND GAPHOLOGY
As discussed below, one type of dissimilation is the phonetic similarity (or similar) sound change associated with the loss of a joint when it is near a joint. Probably the best known example is the decline from Old English to modern English. Haplology is sometimes called articular syncope. (Collaborative haplography in writing - an accidental omission of a letter that must be repeated is an error for the mispell.)
ENGLISH PHONETICS
Election
Language change
Pronunciation
Segment and Suprasegramal
Change the volume
What is the correct pronunciation of "February"?
Word boundaries
EXAMPLES OF DISSIMILATION
"[An example of disimilation is the uncertainty of pronunciation as chimley as a chimney, the third of the two noses being changed to [l]. The final dissimilation is the complete loss of one sound due to its proximity to another sound. A common example of exclusion from similar words is cage (r) column, Kante (r) burial, cemetery (r) voir, terrest (r) ial, south (r) ner, barbitu (r) eat, gove (r) too, and su (r) rewarded. '
(John Algeo and Thomas Payler, The Origin and Development of the English Language, 5th ed. Thomson, 2005)
SEPARATION OF LIQUID CONDITIONS
"Consider the example of the separation of liquid consonants that occurs during a suffix -al attached to some Latin nouns to make adjectives. The continuous suffix process gives us the following pairs: orbit / orbital, person / personal, culture / culture, electricity / electricity. Ammo an / l / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / /, / / / / / / / / / / / /; - al ga - or as a result of dissimilation: solo / solo, modular / modular, luna / lunar "(Kristin Denham and Ann Lobek, Linguistics for All. Wadsworth, 2010)
ASSIMILATION V. DISSIMILATION
"Assimilation is more common than dissimilation; assimilation is usually common throughout the language, and sometimes it is rare. Dissimilation is rare and unusual (sporadic), disimilation can be regular. Dissimilation is common. occurs. at a distance (not neighboring) ... "(Lyle Campbell, Historical Linguistics: Introduction. MIT Press, 2004)
CAUSES AND EFFECTS OF HAPHOLOGY
"We say that assimilation and dissimilation are changes that lead to an increase or decrease in the level of phonetic similarity between these two segments. It is tempting to think that such changes in a segment will somehow occur. ldi on the phonetics of the latter and for generations how this was actually presented..... but the confusion of cause and effect. / decrease, but it is questionable to assume that the degree of similarity is somehow (at least). cause change. The truth is that the real mechanisms of these changes, as usual, are very little known "(Andrew L . Sihler, History of Language: Introduction. John Benjamins, 2000)
GAPLOLOGY
‘Haplology. . . a sequence of repeated sounds is a name given to a simplified change to a single case. For example, if the word is hapology If they refer to hapology (hapologized), it reduces the sequenceilolo galo, hapology> haplogiya. Some real examples:
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |