Language 101
Sounds like ...
Sound neighborhood
Build-A-Word
100

a system of rules that allows us to produce and understand language

Grammar

100

the branch of phonetics which studies the organs of speech and their use in producing speech sounds

Articulatory Phonetics

100

a unit of sound that makes a difference in meaning

Phoneme

100

the smallest unit of meaning or grammatical function

Morpheme

200

objectively analyzing and describing how language is actually used by a speech community

Descriptive Grammar

200

a speech sound that is articulated with complete or partial closure of the vocal tract

Consonant Sound

200

one of a set of multiple possible variations of spoken sounds used to pronounce a single phoneme in a particular language

Allophone /ˈæləfoʊn/ 

200

a suffix that's added to a word to assign a particular grammatical property to that word, such as its tense, number, possession, or comparison.

Inflectional Morpheme

300

the absence of any natural or necessary connection between a word's meaning and its sound or form

Arbitrariness

300

height, advancement, tenseness and rounding describe this type of sound

Vowel sound

300

a set of sounds that have certain phonetic features in common such as labials [f, v, p, b, m, w]

Natural Class

300

Using grammatical categories as examples, explain what are lexical and grammatical morphemes:

lexical morphemes/open class/content words: N, V, Adj, Adv

grammatical morphemes/closed class/function words such as Prep, Det, Quant, Num, Aux, Mod, Conj

400

a characteristic of language that allows users to talk about things and events other than those occurring in the here and now

Displacement

400

a stop and its immediately following release into a fricative that are considered to constitute a single phoneme

Affricate

400

List 4 of the various kinds of phonological processes we learned about this semester:

Assimilation (palatalization, voicing assimilation), Dissimilation, Deletion, Insertion, Exchange, …

400

List 4 of the various kinds of morphological processes we studied this semester:

Affixation, Acronyms, Blending, Backformation, Compounding, Conversion, Clipping, Coining

500

the fundamental language phenomenon consisting of the use of combinations of a small number of meaningless elements to produce a large number of meaningful elements

Duality of Patterning

500

a sound formed by the combination of two vowels in a single syllable, in which the sound begins as one vowel and moves toward another

Diphthong

500

the distribution of sounds in their respective phonetic environments in which one sound never appears in the same phonetic context as the other. For instance, in English, [p] and [pʰ] are allophones of the phoneme /p/ because they occur in this distribution.

Complementary Distribution

500

any of the phonological representations of a single morpheme. For example, the final (s) and (z) sounds of bets and beds are allomorphs of the English noun-plural morpheme

Allomorph