Difference between revisions of "Allophony"
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(from Utrecht Lexicon of Linguistics) |
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Latest revision as of 15:53, 28 January 2008
Allophony is the phenomenon that a phoneme has different (context-dependent) variants. The different variants are called allophones.
Example
In English [th] in tin, [?t] in cat and [t] in stop are allophones of the phoneme /t/.
Comments
Syllable-initially the phoneme is pronounced differently than in medial or in final position. The differences between the allophones can be expressed by phonological rules.