Introducing phonetics & phonology.

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Davenport, Michael, 1954-
Edition:2nd ed.
Imprint:London : Hodder Arnold ; New York : Distributed by Oxford University Press, 2005.
Description:xiv, 223 p. ; 25 cm.
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/5713475
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Hannahs, S. J.
ISBN:0340810459
Table of Contents:
  • List of tables
  • List of figures
  • Preface
  • Preface to the second edition
  • The International Phonetic Alphabet
  • 1. Introduction
  • 1.1. Phonetics and phonology
  • 1.2. The generative enterprise
  • Further reading
  • 2. Introduction to articulatory phonetics
  • 2.1. Overview
  • 2.2. Speech sound classification
  • 2.3. Supra-segmental structure
  • 2.4. Consonants vs. vowels
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • 3. Consonants
  • 3.1. Stops
  • 3.2. Affricates
  • 3.3. Fricatives
  • 3.4. Nasals
  • 3.5. Liquids
  • 3.6. Glides
  • 3.7. An inventory of English consonants
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • 4. Vowels
  • 4.1. Vowel classification
  • 4.2. The vowel space and Cardinal Vowels
  • 4.3. Further classifications
  • 4.4. The vowels of English
  • 4.5. Some vowel systems of English
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • 5. Acoustic phonetics
  • 5.1. Fundamentals
  • 5.2. Speech sounds
  • 5.3. Crosslinguistic values
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • 6. Above the segment
  • 6.1. The syllable
  • 6.2. Stress
  • 6.3. Tone and intonation
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • 7. Features
  • 7.1. Segmental composition
  • 7.2. Phonetic vs. phonological features
  • 7.3. Charting the features
  • 7.4. Conclusion
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • 8. Phonemic analysis
  • 8.1. Sounds that are the same but different
  • 8.2. Finding phonemes and allophones
  • 8.3. Linking levels: rules
  • 8.4. Choosing the underlying form
  • 8.5. Summary
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • 9. Phonological alternations, processes and rules
  • 9.1. Alternations vs. processes vs. rules
  • 9.2. Alternation types
  • 9.3. Formal rules and rule writing
  • 9.4. Overview of phonological operations and rules
  • 9.5. Summary
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • 10. Phonological structure
  • 10.1. The need for richer phonological representation
  • 10.2. Segment internal structure: feature geometry and underspecification
  • 10.3. Autosegmental phonology
  • 10.4. Suprasegmental structure
  • 10.5. Conclusion
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • 11. Derivational analysis
  • 11.1. The aims of analysis
  • 11.2. A derivational analysis of English noun plural formation
  • 11.3. Extrinsic vs. intrinsic rule ordering
  • 11.4. Evaluating competing analyses: evidence, economy and plausibility
  • 11.5. Conclusion
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • 12. Constraining the model
  • 12.1. Abstractness in analysis
  • 12.2. Extrinsic and intrinsic rule ordering revisited
  • 12.3. Constraining the power of the phonological component
  • 12.4. Alternative to derivation: non-derivational phonology
  • 12.5. Conclusion
  • Further reading
  • References
  • Subject index
  • Varieties of English index
  • Language index