ALLOPHONES
MIN PAIRS
VOWELS
SYLLABLES
BONUS
100

What is an allophone?

A variation of a phoneme that does not change meaning.

100

What is a minimal pair?

Two words that differ by only one sound and have different meanings

100

What is the name of the vowel /ə/?

Schwa

100

What is a syllable?

A unit of sound centered around a vowel

100
Name the types of stress

Primary, secondary and unstressed

200

In the word pin, what allophonic process affects /p/?

Aspiration → [pʰ]

200

Do ship and sheep form a minimal pair?

Yes

200

What is the most important part of a syllable?

The vowel (nucleus)

200

Name the three parts of a syllable

Onset, nucleus, coda

200

Explain why atom is pronounced with a flap [ɾ] instead of [t].

Because /t/ is between vowels and the second syllable is unstressed

300

What is the name of the process where /t/ or /d/ becomes [ɾ] between vowels?

Flapping

300

What must change in a minimal pair: one sound or multiple sounds?

Only one sound

300

What is a diphthong?

A sound that contains two vowels

300

What is an open syllable?

A syllable that ends in a vowel

300

What is an unreleased stop?

A stop consonant that sounds weaker because it is in the coda of a syllable

400

In which position does dark /l/ [ɫ] occur?

At the end of a syllable (coda position)

400

Are cat and cut a minimal pair? Why?

Yes, because only the vowel changes (/æ/ vs /ʌ/) and meaning changes

400

What are the three main dimensions used to classify vowels?

Height, front/back position, and lip rounding

400

What is the difference between a stressed and an unstressed syllable?

Stressed syllables are stronger, longer, and clearer; unstressed are weaker and often reduced

400

Why can allophones NOT form minimal pairs?

Because they do not change meaning

500

Why is the /k/ in backpack often unreleased?

Because it occurs at the end of a syllable (and before another consonant)

500

Why are writer and rider NOT a minimal pair in American English?

Because flapping makes them sound the same

500

What happens to vowels in unstressed syllables?

They often reduce to schwa

500

Explain how syllable position affects allophones.

Different positions (onset, coda, between syllables) trigger different allophones (e.g., aspiration, flapping, dark /l/, unreleased stops)

500

Why does the word microphone have more than one full vowel sound?

Because of secondary stress, which keeps vowels from reducing to schwa