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1. Phoneme: Definition and Meaning

In linguistic study, a Phoneme is the smallest unit of sound in a language that can distinguish meaning between words. Modern phonology often treats phonemes not as indivisible wholes, but as bundles of distinctive features (voicing, nasality, place of articulation).

🔥 Exam Focus: Defining a Phoneme
A sound associated with a particular meaning is a Phoneme. (🔥 Asked in Exam)

Distinguishing Meaning: Phonemes are transcribed using the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) and are written between slashes. For instance, in English, the contrast between the words tap, tab, tag, and tan is based purely on the change of a single final phoneme: /p/, /b/, /g/, and /n/.

2. Allophone: Phonetic Variation

An Allophone is one of several phonetically distinct realizations (pronunciations) of a single phoneme, shaped entirely by its position in a word or its surrounding phonetic environment.

🔥 Key Concepts of Allophones

Concept Explanation & Exam Focus
No Meaning Change Unlike phonemes, swapping allophones does not change the meaning of a word. Native speakers usually perceive them as the exact same sound.
Complementary Distribution Allophones occur in complementary distribution, which is the phenomenon where two sounds occur in non-overlapping, mutually exclusive environments. (🔥 Asked in Exam)
English /t/ Variations The /t/ phoneme is pronounced differently in hit [hɪt] (unreleased), tip [tʰɪp] (heavily aspirated), and little (glottal stop/flap). Despite the audible differences, they are all allophones of the /t/ phoneme.

3. Syllable Structure (Onset, Nucleus, Coda)

A syllable is a unit of sound typically composed of a vowel sound alone, or a vowel surrounded by consonants. The structure of a syllable is systematically divided into three parts.

Syllable (σ) Onset (Optional) Rhyme Nucleus (Mandatory) Coda (Optional) pl æ nt Example: English word "plant"

Figure 1: The hierarchical structure of a syllable.

  • Onset (Optional): The consonant(s) occurring before the vowel (e.g., /pl/ in plant).
  • Nucleus (Mandatory): The core of the syllable, almost always a vowel (e.g., /æ/ in plant).
  • Coda (Optional): The consonant(s) following the vowel (e.g., /nt/ in plant).

Note: The Nucleus and Coda together form what is known as the Rhyme.

4. Word Stress & Intonation

Word and Sentence Stress

Stress is the relative emphasis placed on a syllable within a word, or a word within a sentence. In English, stress can completely change a word's meaning or grammatical class (e.g., PREsent as a noun vs. preSENT as a verb).

Intonation Patterns

Intonation refers to the rise and fall of pitch in spoken language, signaling emotion, attitude, and grammatical structure. In tonal languages (like Mandarin), pitch changes distinguish meaning at the word level; in English, it happens at the sentence level.

  • Declarative Sentences & Wh- Questions: Usually end with a falling intonation ("Where are you going?").
  • Yes/No Questions: Typically have a rising intonation ("Are you ready?").
  • Lists: Items have a rising intonation, with a distinct fall on the final item ("We bought apples ↗, bananas ↗, and oranges ↘.").

5. Additional Phonological Processes

When sounds are produced in rapid, connected speech, they influence one another. Phonologists identify several key processes of change.

🔥 Match the List: Phonological Processes

Process Definition & Example
Assimilation A sound becomes similar to a nearby sound to make pronunciation easier (e.g., "good boy" pronounced rapidly as [gʊb bɔɪ]).
Epenthesis The process of inserting an extra sound into a word, often for ease of articulation. (🔥 Asked in Exam) Example: "athlete" mispronounced as "ath-e-lete".
Elision The omission or deletion of a sound in connected speech (e.g., "friendship" rapidly pronounced as "frenship").

6. Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between a Phoneme and an Allophone?

A phoneme is the smallest unit of sound that changes the meaning of a word (e.g., changing /b/ to /p/ changes "bat" to "pat"). An allophone is a phonetic variation of a phoneme that does NOT change the meaning (e.g., the aspirated 'p' in 'pin' vs. the unaspirated 'p' in 'spin').

What does Complementary Distribution mean?

Complementary distribution refers to a linguistic rule where two sounds (usually allophones of the same phoneme) never occur in the exact same phonetic environment. Where one sound is used, the other is excluded.

What makes up the 'Rhyme' of a syllable?

The rhyme of a syllable is composed of the Nucleus (the mandatory vowel sound) and the Coda (the optional consonant sounds that follow the vowel). The Onset is completely separate from the rhyme.

What is Epenthesis?

Epenthesis is a phonological process where an extra, unwritten sound is inserted into a word during speech, usually to break up a difficult consonant cluster (e.g., pronouncing "film" as "fil-um").

UGC NET English, Phonemes, Allophones, Syllable Structure, Onset Nucleus Coda, Complementary Distribution, Word Stress, Intonation, Assimilation, Epenthesis, Elision, 23rd April, 2026

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