The Syllable: Group 4: Nguyễn Thị Kiều Tiên - 1757010250 Võ Thiên Trang - 1757010262
The Syllable: Group 4: Nguyễn Thị Kiều Tiên - 1757010250 Võ Thiên Trang - 1757010262
• Syllable division
1. The nature of the syllable
• It may be defined both phonetically and
phonologically.
• Phonetic ground:
A centre with has little or no obstruction to
airflow and which sounds comparatively loud.
Before and after this centre, there will be
greater obstructions to airflow and less loud sound.
i) Minimum syllable is a single vowel in isolation
‘are’ ɑ: ‘or’ ɔ:
ii) Some syllables have an onset (one or more consonant
preceding the centre)
‘key’ kiː ‘more’ mɔː
iii) Some syllables have a coda (one or more consonant at
the end)
‘am’ æm ‘ought’ ɔːt
iv) Some syllables have both onset and coda
‘ran’ ræn ‘sat’ sæt
• Phonological ground:
the possible combinations of English
phonemes.
the word can begin with a vowel, or with
one, two or three consonants.
‘or’ ɔ: ‘key’ kiː ‘play’ pleɪ ‘spread’ spred
the word can end with a vowel, or with one,
two, three or four consonants.
‘no’ nəʊ ‘not’ nɒt ‘think’ θɪŋk
‘next’ nekst ‘prompts’ prɒmpts
2. The structure of the syllable
a. Onset
‘aim’ eɪm
• The syllable begins with one consonant: initial consonant
‘can’ kæn
• The syllables begin with two or more consonants: consonant
cluster
• Syllables begin with two consonants (two-consonant
clusters):
s (pre-initial) + one from a small set of consonants
(initial): ‘speak’ spiːk
one of about fifteen consonants (initial) + one of the
set l, r, w, j (post-initial): ‘smile’ smaɪl
s (pre-initial / initial) + one of the set l, r, w, j (initial /
post initial): ‘slang’ slæŋ
• Syllables begin with three consonants (three-
consonant clusters):
Syllable
rhyme
onset
peak coda
Syllable division
An unanswered question: how we decide on the division
between syllables?
Ambisyllabic
Thank you
for listening!