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Syllable

A syllable is a unit of organization for a sequence of speech sounds typically made up of a syllable nucleus (most often a vowel) with optional initial and final margins (typically, consonants). Syllables are often considered the phonological "building blocks" of words.[1] They can influence the rhythm of a language, its prosody, its poetic metre and its stress patterns. Speech can usually be divided up into a whole number of syllables: for example, the word ignite is made of two syllables: ig and nite.

Syllabic writing began several hundred years before the first letters. The earliest recorded syllables are on tablets written around 2800 BC in the Sumerian city of Ur. This shift from pictograms to syllables has been called "the most important advance in the history of writing".[2]

A word that consists of a single syllable (like English dog) is called a monosyllable (and is said to be monosyllabic). Similar terms include disyllable (and disyllabic; also bisyllable and bisyllabic) for a word of two syllables; trisyllable (and trisyllabic) for a word of three syllables; and polysyllable (and polysyllabic), which may refer either to a word of more than three syllables or to any word of more than one syllable.

Etymology

Syllable is an Anglo-Norman variation of Old French sillabe, from Latin syllaba, from Koine Greek συλλαβή syllabḗ (Greek pronunciation: [sylːabɛ̌ː]). συλλαβή means "the taken together", referring to letters that are taken together to make a single sound.[3]

συλλαβή is a verbal noun from the verb συλλαμβάνω syllambánō, a compound of the preposition σύν sýn "with" and the verb λαμβάνω lambánō "take".[4] The noun uses the root λαβ-, which appears in the aorist tense; the present tense stem λαμβάν- is formed by adding a nasal infix μ ⟨m⟩ before the β b and a suffix -αν -an at the end.[5]

Transcription

In the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA), the fullstop . marks syllable breaks, as in the word "astronomical" /ˌæs.trə.ˈnɒm.ɪk.əl/.

In practice, however, IPA transcription is typically divided into words by spaces, and often these spaces are also understood to be syllable breaks. In addition, the stress mark ˈ is placed immediately before a stressed syllable, and when the stressed syllable is in the middle of a word, in practice, the stress mark also marks a syllable break, for example in the word "understood" /ʌndərˈstʊd/ (though the syllable boundary may still be explicitly marked with a full stop,[6] e.g. /ʌn.dər.ˈstʊd/).

When a word space comes in the middle of a syllable (that is, when a syllable spans words), a tie bar can be used for liaison, as in the French combination les amis /lɛ.z‿a.mi/. The liaison tie is also used to join lexical words into phonological words, for example hot dog /ˈhɒt‿dɒɡ/.

A Greek sigma, ⟨σ⟩, is used as a wild card for 'syllable', and a dollar/peso sign, ⟨$⟩, marks a syllable boundary where the usual fullstop might be misunderstood. For example, ⟨σσ⟩ is a pair of syllables, and ⟨V$⟩ is a syllable-final vowel.

Components

 
Syllable components as a directed graph
 
Segmental model for cat and sing

Typical model

In the typical theory[citation needed] of syllable structure, the general structure of a syllable (σ) consists of three segments. These segments are grouped into two components:

Onset (ω)
a consonant or consonant cluster, obligatory in some languages, optional or even restricted in others
Rime (ρ)
right branch, contrasts with onset, splits into nucleus and coda
Nucleus (ν)
a vowel or syllabic consonant, obligatory in most languages
Coda (κ)
a consonant or consonant cluster, optional in some languages, highly restricted or prohibited in others

The syllable is usually considered right-branching, i.e. nucleus and coda are grouped together as a "rime" and are only distinguished at the second level.

The nucleus is usually the vowel in the middle of a syllable. The onset is the sound or sounds occurring before the nucleus, and the coda (literally 'tail') is the sound or sounds that follow the nucleus. They are sometimes collectively known as the shell. The term rime covers the nucleus plus coda. In the one-syllable English word cat, the nucleus is a (the sound that can be shouted or sung on its own), the onset c, the coda t, and the rime at. This syllable can be abstracted as a consonant-vowel-consonant syllable, abbreviated CVC. Languages vary greatly in the restrictions on the sounds making up the onset, nucleus and coda of a syllable, according to what is termed a language's phonotactics.

Although every syllable has supra-segmental features, these are usually ignored if not semantically relevant, e.g. in tonal languages.

Tone (τ)
may be carried by the syllable as a whole or by the rime

Chinese model

 
Traditional Chinese syllable structure

In Chinese syllable structure, the onset is replaced with an initial, and a semivowel or liquid forms another segment, called the medial. These four segments are grouped into two slightly different components:[example needed]

Initial (ι)
optional onset, excluding sonorants
Final (φ)
medial, nucleus, and final consonant[7]
Medial (μ)
optional semivowel or liquid[8]
Nucleus (ν)
a vowel or syllabic consonant
Coda (κ)
optional final consonant

In many languages of the Mainland Southeast Asia linguistic area, such as Chinese, the syllable structure is expanded to include an additional, optional segment known as a medial, which is located between the onset (often termed the initial in this context) and the rime. The medial is normally a semivowel, but reconstructions of Old Chinese generally include liquid medials (/r/ in modern reconstructions, /l/ in older versions), and many reconstructions of Middle Chinese include a medial contrast between /i/ and /j/, where the /i/ functions phonologically as a glide rather than as part of the nucleus. In addition, many reconstructions of both Old and Middle Chinese include complex medials such as /rj/, /ji/, /jw/ and /jwi/. The medial groups phonologically with the rime rather than the onset, and the combination of medial and rime is collectively known as the final.

Some linguists, especially when discussing the modern Chinese varieties, use the terms "final" and "rime/rhyme" interchangeably. In historical Chinese phonology, however, the distinction between "final" (including the medial) and "rime" (not including the medial) is important in understanding the rime dictionaries and rime tables that form the primary sources for Middle Chinese, and as a result most authors distinguish the two according to the above definition.

Grouping of components

 

 
Hierarchical model for cat and sing

In some theories of phonology, syllable structures are displayed as tree diagrams (similar to the trees found in some types of syntax). Not all phonologists agree that syllables have internal structure; in fact, some phonologists doubt the existence of the syllable as a theoretical entity.[9]

There are many arguments for a hierarchical relationship, rather than a linear one, between the syllable constituents. One hierarchical model groups the syllable nucleus and coda into an intermediate level, the rime. The hierarchical model accounts for the role that the nucleus+coda constituent plays in verse (i.e., rhyming words such as cat and bat are formed by matching both the nucleus and coda, or the entire rime), and for the distinction between heavy and light syllables, which plays a role in phonological processes such as, for example, sound change in Old English scipu and wordu.[10][further explanation needed]

Body

 
Left-branching hierarchical model

In some traditional descriptions of certain languages such as Cree and Ojibwe, the syllable is considered left-branching, i.e. onset and nucleus group below a higher-level unit, called a "body" or "core". This contrasts with the coda.

Rime

The rime or rhyme of a syllable consists of a nucleus and an optional coda. It is the part of the syllable used in most poetic rhymes, and the part that is lengthened or stressed when a person elongates or stresses a word in speech.

The rime is usually the portion of a syllable from the first vowel to the end. For example, /æt/ is the rime of all of the words at, sat, and flat. However, the nucleus does not necessarily need to be a vowel in some languages. For instance, the rime of the second syllables of the words bottle and fiddle is just /l/, a liquid consonant.

Just as the rime branches into the nucleus and coda, the nucleus and coda may each branch into multiple phonemes. The limit for the number of phonemes which may be contained in each varies by language. For example, Japanese and most Sino-Tibetan languages do not have consonant clusters at the beginning or end of syllables, whereas many Eastern European languages can have more than two consonants at the beginning or end of the syllable. In English, the onset may have up to three consonants, and the coda five: strengths can be pronounced as /ʃtrɛŋkθs/, while angsts /ʔæŋksts/ can have five coda consonants.

Rime and rhyme are variants of the same word, but the rarer form rime is sometimes used to mean specifically syllable rime to differentiate it from the concept of poetic rhyme. This distinction is not made by some linguists and does not appear in most dictionaries.

Examples
C = consonant, V = vowel, optional components are in parentheses.
structure: syllable = onset + rhyme
C+V+C*: C1(C2)V1(V2)(C3)(C4) = C1(C2) + V1(V2)(C3)(C4)
V+C*: V1(V2)(C3)(C4) = + V1(V2)(C3)(C4)

Weight

 
Branching nucleus for pout and branching coda for pond

A heavy syllable is generally one with a branching rime, i.e. it is either a closed syllable that ends in a consonant, or a syllable with a branching nucleus, i.e. a long vowel or diphthong. The name is a metaphor, based on the nucleus or coda having lines that branch in a tree diagram.

In some languages, heavy syllables include both VV (branching nucleus) and VC (branching rime) syllables, contrasted with V, which is a light syllable. In other languages, only VV syllables are considered heavy, while both VC and V syllables are light. Some languages distinguish a third type of superheavy syllable, which consists of VVC syllables (with both a branching nucleus and rime) or VCC syllables (with a coda consisting of two or more consonants) or both.

In moraic theory, heavy syllables are said to have two moras, while light syllables are said to have one and superheavy syllables are said to have three. Japanese phonology is generally described this way.

Many languages forbid superheavy syllables, while a significant number forbid any heavy syllable. Some languages strive for constant syllable weight; for example, in stressed, non-final syllables in Italian, short vowels co-occur with closed syllables while long vowels co-occur with open syllables, so that all such syllables are heavy (not light or superheavy).

The difference between heavy and light frequently determines which syllables receive stress – this is the case in Latin and Arabic, for example. The system of poetic meter in many classical languages, such as Classical Greek, Classical Latin, Old Tamil and Sanskrit, is based on syllable weight rather than stress (so-called quantitative rhythm or quantitative meter).

Syllabification

Syllabification is the separation of a word into syllables, whether spoken or written. In most languages, the actually spoken syllables are the basis of syllabification in writing too. Due to the very weak correspondence between sounds and letters in the spelling of modern English, for example, written syllabification in English has to be based mostly on etymological i.e. morphological instead of phonetic principles. English written syllables therefore do not correspond to the actually spoken syllables of the living language.

Phonotactic rules determine which sounds are allowed or disallowed in each part of the syllable. English allows very complicated syllables; syllables may begin with up to three consonants (as in strength), and occasionally end with as many as five (as in angsts, pronounced [æŋsts]). (Some dialects of English pronounce strengths with a four-consonant onset, and angsts with a five-consonant coda: [stʃɹɛŋkθ] and [æŋksts] respectively.) Many other languages are much more restricted; Japanese, for example, only allows /ɴ/ and a chroneme in a coda, and theoretically has no consonant clusters at all, as the onset is composed of at most one consonant.[11]

The linking of a word-final consonant to a vowel beginning the word immediately following it forms a regular part of the phonetics of some languages, including Spanish, Hungarian, and Turkish. Thus, in Spanish, the phrase los hombres ('the men') is pronounced [loˈsom.bɾes], Hungarian az ember ('the human') as [ɒˈzɛm.bɛr], and Turkish nefret ettim ('I hated it') as [nefˈɾe.tet.tim]. In Italian, a final [j] sound can be moved to the next syllable in enchainement, sometimes with a gemination: e.g., non ne ho mai avuti ('I've never had any of them') is broken into syllables as [non.neˈɔ.ma.jaˈvuːti] and io ci vado e lei anche ('I go there and she does as well') is realized as [jo.tʃiˈvaːdo.e.lɛjˈjaŋ.ke]. A related phenomenon, called consonant mutation, is found in the Celtic languages like Irish and Welsh, whereby unwritten (but historical) final consonants affect the initial consonant of the following word.

Ambisyllabicity

There can be disagreement about the location of some divisions between syllables in spoken language. The problems of dealing with such cases have been most commonly discussed with relation to English. In the case of a word such as hurry, the division may be /hʌr.i/ or /hʌ.ri/, neither of which seems a satisfactory analysis for a non-rhotic accent such as RP (British English): /hʌr.i/ results in a syllable-final /r/, which is not normally found, while /hʌ.ri/ gives a syllable-final short stressed vowel, which is also non-occurring. Arguments can be made in favour of one solution or the other: A general rule has been proposed that states that "Subject to certain conditions ..., consonants are syllabified with the more strongly stressed of two flanking syllables",[12] while many other phonologists prefer to divide syllables with the consonant or consonants attached to the following syllable wherever possible. However, an alternative that has received some support is to treat an intervocalic consonant as ambisyllabic, i.e. belonging both to the preceding and to the following syllable: /hʌṛi/. This is discussed in more detail in English phonology § Phonotactics.

Onset

The onset (also known as anlaut) is the consonant sound or sounds at the beginning of a syllable, occurring before the nucleus. Most syllables have an onset. Syllables without an onset may be said to have an empty or zero onset – that is, nothing where the onset would be.

Onset cluster

Some languages restrict onsets to be only a single consonant, while others allow multiconsonant onsets according to various rules. For example, in English, onsets such as pr-, pl- and tr- are possible but tl- is not, and sk- is possible but ks- is not. In Greek, however, both ks- and tl- are possible onsets, while contrarily in Classical Arabic no multiconsonant onsets are allowed at all.

Null onset

Some languages forbid null onsets. In these languages, words beginning in a vowel, like the English word at, are impossible.

This is less strange than it may appear at first, as most such languages allow syllables to begin with a phonemic glottal stop (the sound in the middle of English uh-oh or, in some dialects, the double T in button, represented in the IPA as /ʔ/). In English, a word that begins with a vowel may be pronounced with an epenthetic glottal stop when following a pause, though the glottal stop may not be a phoneme in the language.

Few languages make a phonemic distinction between a word beginning with a vowel and a word beginning with a glottal stop followed by a vowel, since the distinction will generally only be audible following another word. However, Maltese and some Polynesian languages do make such a distinction, as in Hawaiian /ahi/ ('fire') and /ʔahi/ ← /kahi/ ('tuna') and Maltese /∅/Arabic /h/ and Maltese /k~ʔ/ ← Arabic /q/.

Ashkenazi and Sephardi Hebrew may commonly ignore א, ה and ע, and Arabic forbid empty onsets. The names Israel, Abel, Abraham, Omar, Abdullah, and Iraq appear not to have onsets in the first syllable, but in the original Hebrew and Arabic forms they actually begin with various consonants: the semivowel /j/ in יִשְׂרָאֵל yisra'él, the glottal fricative in /h/ הֶבֶל heḇel, the glottal stop /ʔ/ in אַבְרָהָם 'aḇrāhām, or the pharyngeal fricative /ʕ/ in عُمَر ʿumar, عَبْدُ ٱللّٰ ʿabdu llāh, and لْعِرَاق ʿirāq. Conversely, the Arrernte language of central Australia may prohibit onsets altogether; if so, all syllables have the underlying shape VC(C).[13]

The difference between a syllable with a null onset and one beginning with a glottal stop is often purely a difference of phonological analysis, rather than the actual pronunciation of the syllable. In some cases, the pronunciation of a (putatively) vowel-initial word when following another word – particularly, whether or not a glottal stop is inserted – indicates whether the word should be considered to have a null onset. For example, many Romance languages such as Spanish never insert such a glottal stop, while English does so only some of the time, depending on factors such as conversation speed; in both cases, this suggests that the words in question are truly vowel-initial.

But there are exceptions here, too. For example, standard German (excluding many southern accents) and Arabic both require that a glottal stop be inserted between a word and a following, putatively vowel-initial word. Yet such words are perceived to begin with a vowel in German but a glottal stop in Arabic. The reason for this has to do with other properties of the two languages. For example, a glottal stop does not occur in other situations in German, e.g. before a consonant or at the end of word. On the other hand, in Arabic, not only does a glottal stop occur in such situations (e.g. Classical /saʔala/ "he asked", /raʔj/ "opinion", /dˤawʔ/ "light"), but it occurs in alternations that are clearly indicative of its phonemic status (cf. Classical /kaːtib/ "writer" vs. /maktuːb/ "written", /ʔaːkil/ "eater" vs. /maʔkuːl/ "eaten"). In other words, while the glottal stop is predictable in German (inserted only if a stressed syllable would otherwise begin with a vowel),[14] the same sound is a regular consonantal phoneme in Arabic. The status of this consonant in the respective writing systems corresponds to this difference: there is no reflex of the glottal stop in German orthography, but there is a letter in the Arabic alphabet (Hamza (ء)).

The writing system of a language may not correspond with the phonological analysis of the language in terms of its handling of (potentially) null onsets. For example, in some languages written in the Latin alphabet, an initial glottal stop is left unwritten (see the German example); on the other hand, some languages written using non-Latin alphabets such as abjads and abugidas have a special zero consonant to represent a null onset. As an example, in Hangul, the alphabet of the Korean language, a null onset is represented with ㅇ at the left or top section of a grapheme, as in "station", pronounced yeok, where the diphthong yeo is the nucleus and k is the coda.

Nucleus

 

Examples of syllable nuclei
Word Nucleus
cat [kæt] [æ]
bed [bɛd] [ɛ]
ode [oʊd] [oʊ]
beet [bit] [i]
bite [baɪt] [aɪ]
rain [ɻeɪn] [eɪ]
bitten
[ˈbɪt.ən] or [ˈbɪt.n̩]
[ɪ]
[ə] or [n̩]

The nucleus is usually the vowel in the middle of a syllable. Generally, every syllable requires a nucleus (sometimes called the peak), and the minimal syllable consists only of a nucleus, as in the English words "eye" or "owe". The syllable nucleus is usually a vowel, in the form of a monophthong, diphthong, or triphthong, but sometimes is a syllabic consonant.

In most Germanic languages, lax vowels can occur only in closed syllables. Therefore, these vowels are also called checked vowels, as opposed to the tense vowels that are called free vowels because they can occur even in open syllables.

Consonant nucleus

The notion of syllable is challenged by languages that allow long strings of obstruents without any intervening vowel or sonorant. By far the most common syllabic consonants are sonorants like [l], [r], [m], [n] or [ŋ], as in English bottle, church (in rhotic accents), rhythm, button and lock 'n key. However, English allows syllabic obstruents in a few para-verbal onomatopoeic utterances such as shh (used to command silence) and psst (used to attract attention). All of these have been analyzed as phonemically syllabic. Obstruent-only syllables also occur phonetically in some prosodic situations when unstressed vowels elide between obstruents, as in potato [pʰˈteɪɾəʊ] and today [tʰˈdeɪ], which do not change in their number of syllables despite losing a syllabic nucleus.

A few languages have so-called syllabic fricatives, also known as fricative vowels, at the phonemic level. (In the context of Chinese phonology, the related but non-synonymous term apical vowel is commonly used.) Mandarin Chinese is famous for having such sounds in at least some of its dialects, for example the pinyin syllables sī shī rī, usually pronounced [sź̩ ʂʐ̩́ ʐʐ̩́], respectively. Though, like the nucleus of rhotic English church, there is debate over whether these nuclei are consonants or vowels.

Languages of the northwest coast of North America, including Salishan, Wakashan and Chinookan languages, allow stop consonants and voiceless fricatives as syllables at the phonemic level, in even the most careful enunciation. An example is Chinook [ɬtʰpʰt͡ʃʰkʰtʰ] 'those two women are coming this way out of the water'. Linguists have analyzed this situation in various ways, some arguing that such syllables have no nucleus at all and some arguing that the concept of "syllable" cannot clearly be applied at all to these languages.

Other examples:

Nuxálk (Bella Coola)
[ɬχʷtʰɬt͡sʰxʷ] 'you spat on me'
[t͡sʼkʰtʰskʷʰt͡sʼ] 'he arrived'
[xɬpʼχʷɬtʰɬpʰɬɬs] 'he had in his possession a bunchberry plant'[15]
[sxs] 'seal blubber'

In Bagemihl's survey of previous analyses, he finds that the Bella Coola word /t͡sʼktskʷt͡sʼ/ 'he arrived' would have been parsed into 0, 2, 3, 5, or 6 syllables depending on which analysis is used. One analysis would consider all vowel and consonant segments as syllable nuclei, another would consider only a small subset (fricatives or sibilants) as nuclei candidates, and another would simply deny the existence of syllables completely. However, when working with recordings rather than transcriptions, the syllables can be obvious in such languages, and native speakers have strong intuitions as to what the syllables are.

This type of phenomenon has also been reported in Berber languages (such as Indlawn Tashlhiyt Berber), Mon–Khmer languages (such as Semai, Temiar, Khmu) and the Ōgami dialect of Miyako, a Ryukyuan language.[16]

Indlawn Tashlhiyt Berber
[tftktst tfktstt] 'you sprained it and then gave it'
[rkkm] 'rot' (imperf.)[17][18]
Semai
[kckmrʔɛːc] 'short, fat arms'[19]

Coda

The coda (also known as auslaut) comprises the consonant sounds of a syllable that follow the nucleus. The sequence of nucleus and coda is called a rime. Some syllables consist of only a nucleus, only an onset and a nucleus with no coda, or only a nucleus and coda with no onset.

The phonotactics of many languages forbid syllable codas. Examples are Swahili and Hawaiian. In others, codas are restricted to a small subset of the consonants that appear in onset position. At a phonemic level in Japanese, for example, a coda may only be a nasal (homorganic with any following consonant) or, in the middle of a word, gemination of the following consonant. (On a phonetic level, other codas occur due to elision of /i/ and /u/.) In other languages, nearly any consonant allowed as an onset is also allowed in the coda, even clusters of consonants. In English, for example, all onset consonants except /h/ are allowed as syllable codas.

If the coda consists of a consonant cluster, the sonority typically decreases from first to last, as in the English word help. This is called the sonority hierarchy (or sonority scale).[20] English onset and coda clusters are therefore different. The onset /str/ in strengths does not appear as a coda in any English word. However, some clusters do occur as both onsets and codas, such as /st/ in stardust. The sonority hierarchy is more strict in some languages and less strict in others.

Open and closed

A coda-less syllable of the form V, CV, CCV, etc. (V = vowel, C = consonant) is called an open syllable or free syllable, while a syllable that has a coda (VC, CVC, CVCC, etc.) is called a closed syllable or checked syllable. They have nothing to do with open and close vowels, but are defined according to the phoneme that ends the syllable: a vowel (open syllable) or a consonant (closed syllable). Almost all languages allow open syllables, but some, such as Hawaiian, do not have closed syllables.

When a syllable is not the last syllable in a word, the nucleus normally must be followed by two consonants in order for the syllable to be closed. This is because a single following consonant is typically considered the onset of the following syllable. For example, Spanish casar ("to marry") is composed of an open syllable followed by a closed syllable (ca-sar), whereas cansar "to get tired" is composed of two closed syllables (can-sar). When a geminate (double) consonant occurs, the syllable boundary occurs in the middle, e.g. Italian panna "cream" (pan-na); cf. Italian pane "bread" (pa-ne).

English words may consist of a single closed syllable, with nucleus denoted by ν, and coda denoted by κ:

  • in: ν = /ɪ/, κ = /n/
  • cup: ν = /ʌ/, κ = /p/
  • tall: ν = /ɔː/, κ = /l/
  • milk: ν = /ɪ/, κ = /lk/
  • tints: ν = /ɪ/, κ = /nts/
  • fifths: ν = /ɪ/, κ = /fθs/
  • sixths: ν = /ɪ/, κ = /ksθs/
  • twelfths: ν = /ɛ/, κ = /lfθs/
  • strengths: ν = /ɛ/, κ = /ŋθs/

English words may also consist of a single open syllable, ending in a nucleus, without a coda:

  • glue, ν = /uː/
  • pie, ν = /aɪ/
  • though, ν = /oʊ/
  • boy, ν = /ɔɪ/

A list of examples of syllable codas in English is found at English phonology#Coda.

Null coda

Some languages, such as Hawaiian, forbid codas, so that all syllables are open.

Suprasegmental features

The domain of suprasegmental features is the syllable (or some larger unit), but not a specific sound. That is to say, these features may effect more than a single segment, and possibly all segments of a syllable:

Sometimes syllable length is also counted as a suprasegmental feature; for example, in some Germanic languages, long vowels may only exist with short consonants and vice versa. However, syllables can be analyzed as compositions of long and short phonemes, as in Finnish and Japanese, where consonant gemination and vowel length are independent.

Tone

In most languages, the pitch or pitch contour in which a syllable is pronounced conveys shades of meaning such as emphasis or surprise, or distinguishes a statement from a question. In tonal languages, however, the pitch affects the basic lexical meaning (e.g. "cat" vs. "dog") or grammatical meaning (e.g. past vs. present). In some languages, only the pitch itself (e.g. high vs. low) has this effect, while in others, especially East Asian languages such as Chinese, Thai or Vietnamese, the shape or contour (e.g. level vs. rising vs. falling) also needs to be distinguished.

Accent

Syllable structure often interacts with stress or pitch accent. In Latin, for example, stress is regularly determined by syllable weight, a syllable counting as heavy if it has at least one of the following:

In each case the syllable is considered to have two morae.

The first syllable of a word is the initial syllable and the last syllable is the final syllable.

In languages accented on one of the last three syllables, the last syllable is called the ultima, the next-to-last is called the penult, and the third syllable from the end is called the antepenult. These terms come from Latin ultima "last", paenultima "almost last", and antepaenultima "before almost last".

In Ancient Greek, there are three accent marks (acute, circumflex, and grave), and terms were used to describe words based on the position and type of accent. Some of these terms are used in the description of other languages.

Placement of accent
Antepenult Penult Ultima
Type
of
accent
Circumflex properispomenon perispomenon
Acute proparoxytone paroxytone oxytone
Any barytone

History

Guilhem Molinier, a member of the Consistori del Gay Saber, which was the first literary academy in the world and held the Floral Games to award the best troubadour with the violeta d'aur top prize, gave a definition of the syllable in his Leys d'amor (1328–1337), a book aimed at regulating then-flourishing Occitan poetry:

Sillaba votz es literals.
Segon los ditz gramaticals.
En un accen pronunciada.
Et en un trag: d'una alenada.

A syllable is the sound of several letters,
According to those called grammarians,
Pronounced in one accent
And uninterruptedly: in one breath.

See also

References

  1. ^ de Jong, Kenneth (2003). "Temporal constraints and characterising syllable structuring". In Local, John; Ogden, Richard; Temple, Rosalind (eds.). Phonetic Interpretation: Papers in Laboratory Phonology VI. Cambridge University Press. pp. 253–268. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511486425.015. ISBN 978-0-521-82402-6. Page 254.
  2. ^ Walker, Christopher B. F. (1990). "Cuneiform". Reading the Past: Ancient Writing from Cuneiform to the Alphabet. University of California Press; British Museum. ISBN 0-520-07431-9. as cited in Blainey, Geoffrey (2002). A Short History of the World. Chicago, IL: Dee. p. 60. ISBN 1-56663-507-1.
  3. ^ Harper, Douglas. "syllable". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 2015-01-05.
  4. ^ λαμβάνω. Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; A Greek–English Lexicon at the Perseus Project
  5. ^ Smyth 1920, §523: present stems formed by suffixes containing ν
  6. ^ International Phonetic Association (December 1989). "Report on the 1989 Kiel Convention: International Phonetic Association". Journal of the International Phonetic Association. Cambridge University Press. 19 (2): 75–76. doi:10.1017/S0025100300003868. S2CID 249412330.
  7. ^ More generally, the letter φ indicates a prosodic foot of two syllables
  8. ^ More generally, the letter μ indicates a mora
  9. ^ For discussion of the theoretical existence of the syllable see . CUNY Phonology Forum. CUNY Graduate Center. Archived from the original on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 21 June 2022.
  10. ^ Feng, Shengli (2003). A Prosodic Grammar of Chinese. University of Kansas. p. 3.
  11. ^ Shibatani, Masayoshi (1987). "Japanese". In Bernard Comrie (ed.). The World's Major Languages. Oxford University Press. pp. 855–80. ISBN 0-19-520521-9.
  12. ^ Wells, John C. (1990). "Syllabification and allophony". In Ramsaran, Susan (ed.). Studies in the pronunciation of English : a commemorative volume in honour of A.C. Gimson. Abingdon, UK: Routledge. pp. 76–86. ISBN 9781138918658.
  13. ^ Breen, Gavan; Pensalfini, Rob (1999). "Arrernte: A Language with No Syllable Onsets" (PDF). Linguistic Inquiry. 30 (1): 1–25. doi:10.1162/002438999553940. JSTOR 4179048. S2CID 57564955.
  14. ^ Wiese, Richard (2000). Phonology of German. Oxford University Press. pp. 58–61. ISBN 9780198299509.
  15. ^ Bagemihl 1991, pp. 589, 593, 627
  16. ^ Pellard, Thomas (2010). "Ōgami (Miyako Ryukyuan)". In Shimoji, Michinori (ed.). An introduction to Ryukyuan languages (PDF). Fuchū, Tokyo: Research Institute for Languages and Cultures of Asia and Africa, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies. pp. 113–166. ISBN 978-4-86337-072-2. Retrieved 21 June 2022. HAL hal-00529598
  17. ^ Dell & Elmedlaoui 1985
  18. ^ Dell & Elmedlaoui 1988
  19. ^ Sloan 1988
  20. ^ Harrington, Jonathan; Cox, Felicity (August 2014). "Syllable and foot: The syllable and phonotactic constraints". Department of Linguistics. Macquarie University. Retrieved 21 June 2022.

Sources and recommended reading

  • Bagemihl, Bruce (1991). "Syllable structure in Bella Coola". Linguistic Inquiry. 22 (4): 589–646. JSTOR 4178744.
  • Clements, George N.; Keyser, Samuel J. (1983). CV phonology: a generative theory of the syllable. Linguistic Inquiry Monographs. Vol. 9. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press. ISBN 9780262030984.
  • Dell, François; Elmedlaoui, Mohamed (1985). "Syllabic consonants and syllabification in Imdlawn Tashlhiyt Berber". Journal of African Languages and Linguistics. 7 (2): 105–130. doi:10.1515/jall.1985.7.2.105. S2CID 29304770.
  • Dell, François; Elmedlaoui, Mohamed (1988). "Syllabic consonants in Berber: Some new evidence". Journal of African Languages and Linguistics. 10: 1–17. doi:10.1515/jall.1988.10.1.1. S2CID 144470527.
  • Ladefoged, Peter (2001). A course in phonetics (4th ed.). Fort Worth, TX: Harcourt College Publishers. ISBN 0-15-507319-2.
  • Sloan, Kerry (1988). "Bare-Consonant Reduplication: Implications for a Prosodic Theory of Reduplication". In Borer, Hagit (ed.). The Proceedings of the Seventh West Coast Conference on Formal Linguistics. WCCFL 7. Irvine, CA: University of Chicago Press. pp. 319–330. ISBN 9780937073407.
  • Smyth, Herbert Weir (1920). A Greek Grammar for Colleges. American Book Company. Retrieved 1 January 2014 – via CCEL.

External links

  • Syllable Dictionary: Look up the number of syllables in a word. Learn to divide into syllables. Hear it pronounced.
  • Do syllables have internal structure? What is their status in phonology? CUNY Phonology Forum 2019-03-30 at the Wayback Machine
  • Syllable Word Counter A comprehensive database of words and their syllables
  • Syllable drill. Listen to syllables and select its representation in Latin letters
  • Syllable counter: Count the number of syllables for any word or sentence.

syllable, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, contains, phonetic, transcriptions, international, phonetic, alphabet, introductory, guide, symbols, help, distinction, between, brackets, transcription, delimiters, syllable, unit, organization, sequence, . For other uses see Syllable disambiguation This article contains phonetic transcriptions in the International Phonetic Alphabet IPA For an introductory guide on IPA symbols see Help IPA For the distinction between and see IPA Brackets and transcription delimiters A syllable is a unit of organization for a sequence of speech sounds typically made up of a syllable nucleus most often a vowel with optional initial and final margins typically consonants Syllables are often considered the phonological building blocks of words 1 They can influence the rhythm of a language its prosody its poetic metre and its stress patterns Speech can usually be divided up into a whole number of syllables for example the word ignite is made of two syllables ig and nite Syllabic writing began several hundred years before the first letters The earliest recorded syllables are on tablets written around 2800 BC in the Sumerian city of Ur This shift from pictograms to syllables has been called the most important advance in the history of writing 2 A word that consists of a single syllable like English dog is called a monosyllable and is said to be monosyllabic Similar terms include disyllable and disyllabic also bisyllable and bisyllabic for a word of two syllables trisyllable and trisyllabic for a word of three syllables and polysyllable and polysyllabic which may refer either to a word of more than three syllables or to any word of more than one syllable Contents 1 Etymology 2 Transcription 3 Components 3 1 Typical model 3 2 Chinese model 3 3 Grouping of components 3 3 1 Body 3 3 2 Rime 3 3 3 Weight 4 Syllabification 4 1 Ambisyllabicity 4 2 Onset 4 2 1 Onset cluster 4 2 2 Null onset 4 3 Nucleus 4 3 1 Consonant nucleus 4 4 Coda 4 4 1 Open and closed 4 4 2 Null coda 5 Suprasegmental features 5 1 Tone 5 2 Accent 6 History 7 See also 8 References 9 Sources and recommended reading 10 External linksEtymology EditSyllable is an Anglo Norman variation of Old French sillabe from Latin syllaba from Koine Greek syllabh syllabḗ Greek pronunciation sylːabɛ ː syllabh means the taken together referring to letters that are taken together to make a single sound 3 syllabh is a verbal noun from the verb syllambanw syllambanō a compound of the preposition syn syn with and the verb lambanw lambanō take 4 The noun uses the root lab which appears in the aorist tense the present tense stem lamban is formed by adding a nasal infix m m before the b b and a suffix an an at the end 5 Transcription EditIn the International Phonetic Alphabet IPA the fullstop marks syllable breaks as in the word astronomical ˌaes tre ˈnɒm ɪk el In practice however IPA transcription is typically divided into words by spaces and often these spaces are also understood to be syllable breaks In addition the stress mark ˈ is placed immediately before a stressed syllable and when the stressed syllable is in the middle of a word in practice the stress mark also marks a syllable break for example in the word understood ʌnderˈstʊd though the syllable boundary may still be explicitly marked with a full stop 6 e g ʌn der ˈstʊd When a word space comes in the middle of a syllable that is when a syllable spans words a tie bar can be used for liaison as in the French combination les amis lɛ z a mi The liaison tie is also used to join lexical words into phonological words for example hot dog ˈhɒt dɒɡ A Greek sigma s is used as a wild card for syllable and a dollar peso sign marks a syllable boundary where the usual fullstop might be misunderstood For example ss is a pair of syllables and V is a syllable final vowel Components EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Syllable components as a directed graph Segmental model for cat and sing Typical model Edit In the typical theory citation needed of syllable structure the general structure of a syllable s consists of three segments These segments are grouped into two components Onset w a consonant or consonant cluster obligatory in some languages optional or even restricted in others Rime r right branch contrasts with onset splits into nucleus and codaNucleus n a vowel or syllabic consonant obligatory in most languages Coda k a consonant or consonant cluster optional in some languages highly restricted or prohibited in others dd The syllable is usually considered right branching i e nucleus and coda are grouped together as a rime and are only distinguished at the second level The nucleus is usually the vowel in the middle of a syllable The onset is the sound or sounds occurring before the nucleus and the coda literally tail is the sound or sounds that follow the nucleus They are sometimes collectively known as the shell The term rime covers the nucleus plus coda In the one syllable English word cat the nucleus is a the sound that can be shouted or sung on its own the onset c the coda t and the rime at This syllable can be abstracted as a consonant vowel consonant syllable abbreviated CVC Languages vary greatly in the restrictions on the sounds making up the onset nucleus and coda of a syllable according to what is termed a language s phonotactics Although every syllable has supra segmental features these are usually ignored if not semantically relevant e g in tonal languages Tone t may be carried by the syllable as a whole or by the rimeChinese model Edit See also Fanqie Traditional Chinese syllable structure In Chinese syllable structure the onset is replaced with an initial and a semivowel or liquid forms another segment called the medial These four segments are grouped into two slightly different components example needed Initial i optional onset excluding sonorants Final f medial nucleus and final consonant 7 Medial m optional semivowel or liquid 8 Nucleus n a vowel or syllabic consonant Coda k optional final consonant dd In many languages of the Mainland Southeast Asia linguistic area such as Chinese the syllable structure is expanded to include an additional optional segment known as a medial which is located between the onset often termed the initial in this context and the rime The medial is normally a semivowel but reconstructions of Old Chinese generally include liquid medials r in modern reconstructions l in older versions and many reconstructions of Middle Chinese include a medial contrast between i and j where the i functions phonologically as a glide rather than as part of the nucleus In addition many reconstructions of both Old and Middle Chinese include complex medials such as rj ji jw and jwi The medial groups phonologically with the rime rather than the onset and the combination of medial and rime is collectively known as the final Some linguists especially when discussing the modern Chinese varieties use the terms final and rime rhyme interchangeably In historical Chinese phonology however the distinction between final including the medial and rime not including the medial is important in understanding the rime dictionaries and rime tables that form the primary sources for Middle Chinese and as a result most authors distinguish the two according to the above definition Grouping of components Edit Hierarchical model for cat and sing In some theories of phonology syllable structures are displayed as tree diagrams similar to the trees found in some types of syntax Not all phonologists agree that syllables have internal structure in fact some phonologists doubt the existence of the syllable as a theoretical entity 9 There are many arguments for a hierarchical relationship rather than a linear one between the syllable constituents One hierarchical model groups the syllable nucleus and coda into an intermediate level the rime The hierarchical model accounts for the role that the nucleus coda constituent plays in verse i e rhyming words such as cat and bat are formed by matching both the nucleus and coda or the entire rime and for the distinction between heavy and light syllables which plays a role in phonological processes such as for example sound change in Old English scipu and wordu 10 further explanation needed Body Edit Left branching hierarchical model In some traditional descriptions of certain languages such as Cree and Ojibwe the syllable is considered left branching i e onset and nucleus group below a higher level unit called a body or core This contrasts with the coda Rime Edit The rime or rhyme of a syllable consists of a nucleus and an optional coda It is the part of the syllable used in most poetic rhymes and the part that is lengthened or stressed when a person elongates or stresses a word in speech The rime is usually the portion of a syllable from the first vowel to the end For example aet is the rime of all of the words at sat and flat However the nucleus does not necessarily need to be a vowel in some languages For instance the rime of the second syllables of the words bottle and fiddle is just l a liquid consonant Just as the rime branches into the nucleus and coda the nucleus and coda may each branch into multiple phonemes The limit for the number of phonemes which may be contained in each varies by language For example Japanese and most Sino Tibetan languages do not have consonant clusters at the beginning or end of syllables whereas many Eastern European languages can have more than two consonants at the beginning or end of the syllable In English the onset may have up to three consonants and the coda five strengths can be pronounced as ʃ t r ɛ ŋ k 8 s while angsts ʔ ae ŋ k s t s can have five coda consonants Rime and rhyme are variants of the same word but the rarer form rime is sometimes used to mean specifically syllable rime to differentiate it from the concept of poetic rhyme This distinction is not made by some linguists and does not appear in most dictionaries Examples C consonant V vowel optional components are in parentheses structure syllable onset rhymeC V C C1 C2 V1 V2 C3 C4 C1 C2 V1 V2 C3 C4 V C V1 V2 C3 C4 V1 V2 C3 C4 Weight Edit Branching nucleus for pout and branching coda for pond Main article Syllable weight A heavy syllable is generally one with a branching rime i e it is either a closed syllable that ends in a consonant or a syllable with a branching nucleus i e a long vowel or diphthong The name is a metaphor based on the nucleus or coda having lines that branch in a tree diagram In some languages heavy syllables include both VV branching nucleus and VC branching rime syllables contrasted with V which is a light syllable In other languages only VV syllables are considered heavy while both VC and V syllables are light Some languages distinguish a third type of superheavy syllable which consists of VVC syllables with both a branching nucleus and rime or VCC syllables with a coda consisting of two or more consonants or both In moraic theory heavy syllables are said to have two moras while light syllables are said to have one and superheavy syllables are said to have three Japanese phonology is generally described this way Many languages forbid superheavy syllables while a significant number forbid any heavy syllable Some languages strive for constant syllable weight for example in stressed non final syllables in Italian short vowels co occur with closed syllables while long vowels co occur with open syllables so that all such syllables are heavy not light or superheavy The difference between heavy and light frequently determines which syllables receive stress this is the case in Latin and Arabic for example The system of poetic meter in many classical languages such as Classical Greek Classical Latin Old Tamil and Sanskrit is based on syllable weight rather than stress so called quantitative rhythm or quantitative meter Syllabification EditSee also Syllabification Phonotactics and Sonority hierarchy Syllabification is the separation of a word into syllables whether spoken or written In most languages the actually spoken syllables are the basis of syllabification in writing too Due to the very weak correspondence between sounds and letters in the spelling of modern English for example written syllabification in English has to be based mostly on etymological i e morphological instead of phonetic principles English written syllables therefore do not correspond to the actually spoken syllables of the living language Phonotactic rules determine which sounds are allowed or disallowed in each part of the syllable English allows very complicated syllables syllables may begin with up to three consonants as in strength and occasionally end with as many as five as in angsts pronounced aeŋsts Some dialects of English pronounce strengths with a four consonant onset and angsts with a five consonant coda stʃɹɛŋk8 and aeŋksts respectively Many other languages are much more restricted Japanese for example only allows ɴ and a chroneme in a coda and theoretically has no consonant clusters at all as the onset is composed of at most one consonant 11 The linking of a word final consonant to a vowel beginning the word immediately following it forms a regular part of the phonetics of some languages including Spanish Hungarian and Turkish Thus in Spanish the phrase los hombres the men is pronounced loˈsom bɾes Hungarian az ember the human as ɒˈzɛm bɛr and Turkish nefret ettim I hated it as nefˈɾe tet tim In Italian a final j sound can be moved to the next syllable in enchainement sometimes with a gemination e g non ne ho mai avuti I ve never had any of them is broken into syllables as non neˈɔ ma jaˈvuːti and io ci vado e lei anche I go there and she does as well is realized as jo tʃiˈvaːdo e lɛjˈjaŋ ke A related phenomenon called consonant mutation is found in the Celtic languages like Irish and Welsh whereby unwritten but historical final consonants affect the initial consonant of the following word Ambisyllabicity Edit There can be disagreement about the location of some divisions between syllables in spoken language The problems of dealing with such cases have been most commonly discussed with relation to English In the case of a word such as hurry the division may be hʌr i or hʌ ri neither of which seems a satisfactory analysis for a non rhotic accent such as RP British English hʌr i results in a syllable final r which is not normally found while hʌ ri gives a syllable final short stressed vowel which is also non occurring Arguments can be made in favour of one solution or the other A general rule has been proposed that states that Subject to certain conditions consonants are syllabified with the more strongly stressed of two flanking syllables 12 while many other phonologists prefer to divide syllables with the consonant or consonants attached to the following syllable wherever possible However an alternative that has received some support is to treat an intervocalic consonant as ambisyllabic i e belonging both to the preceding and to the following syllable hʌṛi This is discussed in more detail in English phonology Phonotactics Onset Edit The onset also known as anlaut is the consonant sound or sounds at the beginning of a syllable occurring before the nucleus Most syllables have an onset Syllables without an onset may be said to have an empty or zero onset that is nothing where the onset would be Onset cluster Edit Some languages restrict onsets to be only a single consonant while others allow multiconsonant onsets according to various rules For example in English onsets such as pr pl and tr are possible but tl is not and sk is possible but ks is not In Greek however both ks and tl are possible onsets while contrarily in Classical Arabic no multiconsonant onsets are allowed at all Null onset Edit Some languages forbid null onsets In these languages words beginning in a vowel like the English word at are impossible This is less strange than it may appear at first as most such languages allow syllables to begin with a phonemic glottal stop the sound in the middle of English uh oh or in some dialects the double T in button represented in the IPA as ʔ In English a word that begins with a vowel may be pronounced with an epenthetic glottal stop when following a pause though the glottal stop may not be a phoneme in the language Few languages make a phonemic distinction between a word beginning with a vowel and a word beginning with a glottal stop followed by a vowel since the distinction will generally only be audible following another word However Maltese and some Polynesian languages do make such a distinction as in Hawaiian ahi fire and ʔahi kahi tuna and Maltese Arabic h and Maltese k ʔ Arabic q Ashkenazi and Sephardi Hebrew may commonly ignore א ה and ע and Arabic forbid empty onsets The names Israel Abel Abraham Omar Abdullah and Iraq appear not to have onsets in the first syllable but in the original Hebrew and Arabic forms they actually begin with various consonants the semivowel j in י ש ר א ל yisra el the glottal fricative in h ה ב ל heḇel the glottal stop ʔ in א ב ר ה ם aḇraham or the pharyngeal fricative ʕ in ع م ر ʿumar ع ب د ٱلل ʿabdu llah and ل ع ر اق ʿiraq Conversely the Arrernte language of central Australia may prohibit onsets altogether if so all syllables have the underlying shape VC C 13 The difference between a syllable with a null onset and one beginning with a glottal stop is often purely a difference of phonological analysis rather than the actual pronunciation of the syllable In some cases the pronunciation of a putatively vowel initial word when following another word particularly whether or not a glottal stop is inserted indicates whether the word should be considered to have a null onset For example many Romance languages such as Spanish never insert such a glottal stop while English does so only some of the time depending on factors such as conversation speed in both cases this suggests that the words in question are truly vowel initial But there are exceptions here too For example standard German excluding many southern accents and Arabic both require that a glottal stop be inserted between a word and a following putatively vowel initial word Yet such words are perceived to begin with a vowel in German but a glottal stop in Arabic The reason for this has to do with other properties of the two languages For example a glottal stop does not occur in other situations in German e g before a consonant or at the end of word On the other hand in Arabic not only does a glottal stop occur in such situations e g Classical saʔala he asked raʔj opinion dˤawʔ light but it occurs in alternations that are clearly indicative of its phonemic status cf Classical kaːtib writer vs maktuːb written ʔaːkil eater vs maʔkuːl eaten In other words while the glottal stop is predictable in German inserted only if a stressed syllable would otherwise begin with a vowel 14 the same sound is a regular consonantal phoneme in Arabic The status of this consonant in the respective writing systems corresponds to this difference there is no reflex of the glottal stop in German orthography but there is a letter in the Arabic alphabet Hamza ء The writing system of a language may not correspond with the phonological analysis of the language in terms of its handling of potentially null onsets For example in some languages written in the Latin alphabet an initial glottal stop is left unwritten see the German example on the other hand some languages written using non Latin alphabets such as abjads and abugidas have a special zero consonant to represent a null onset As an example in Hangul the alphabet of the Korean language a null onset is represented with ㅇ at the left or top section of a grapheme as in 역 station pronounced yeok where the diphthong yeo is the nucleus and k is the coda Nucleus Edit Examples of syllable nuclei Word Nucleuscat kaet ae bed bɛd ɛ ode oʊd oʊ beet bit i bite baɪt aɪ rain ɻeɪn eɪ bitten ˈbɪt en or ˈbɪt n ɪ e or n The nucleus is usually the vowel in the middle of a syllable Generally every syllable requires a nucleus sometimes called the peak and the minimal syllable consists only of a nucleus as in the English words eye or owe The syllable nucleus is usually a vowel in the form of a monophthong diphthong or triphthong but sometimes is a syllabic consonant In most Germanic languages lax vowels can occur only in closed syllables Therefore these vowels are also called checked vowels as opposed to the tense vowels that are called free vowels because they can occur even in open syllables Consonant nucleus Edit Main article Syllabic consonant The notion of syllable is challenged by languages that allow long strings of obstruents without any intervening vowel or sonorant By far the most common syllabic consonants are sonorants like l r m n or ŋ as in English bottle church in rhotic accents rhythm button and lock n key However English allows syllabic obstruents in a few para verbal onomatopoeic utterances such as shh used to command silence and psst used to attract attention All of these have been analyzed as phonemically syllabic Obstruent only syllables also occur phonetically in some prosodic situations when unstressed vowels elide between obstruents as in potato pʰˈteɪɾeʊ and today tʰˈdeɪ which do not change in their number of syllables despite losing a syllabic nucleus A few languages have so called syllabic fricatives also known as fricative vowels at the phonemic level In the context of Chinese phonology the related but non synonymous term apical vowel is commonly used Mandarin Chinese is famous for having such sounds in at least some of its dialects for example the pinyin syllables si shi ri usually pronounced sz ʂʐ ʐʐ respectively Though like the nucleus of rhotic English church there is debate over whether these nuclei are consonants or vowels Languages of the northwest coast of North America including Salishan Wakashan and Chinookan languages allow stop consonants and voiceless fricatives as syllables at the phonemic level in even the most careful enunciation An example is Chinook ɬtʰpʰt ʃʰkʰtʰ those two women are coming this way out of the water Linguists have analyzed this situation in various ways some arguing that such syllables have no nucleus at all and some arguing that the concept of syllable cannot clearly be applied at all to these languages Other examples Nuxalk Bella Coola ɬxʷtʰɬt sʰxʷ you spat on me t sʼkʰtʰskʷʰt sʼ he arrived xɬpʼxʷɬtʰɬpʰɬɬs he had in his possession a bunchberry plant 15 sxs seal blubber In Bagemihl s survey of previous analyses he finds that the Bella Coola word t sʼktskʷt sʼ he arrived would have been parsed into 0 2 3 5 or 6 syllables depending on which analysis is used One analysis would consider all vowel and consonant segments as syllable nuclei another would consider only a small subset fricatives or sibilants as nuclei candidates and another would simply deny the existence of syllables completely However when working with recordings rather than transcriptions the syllables can be obvious in such languages and native speakers have strong intuitions as to what the syllables are This type of phenomenon has also been reported in Berber languages such as Indlawn Tashlhiyt Berber Mon Khmer languages such as Semai Temiar Khmu and the Ōgami dialect of Miyako a Ryukyuan language 16 Indlawn Tashlhiyt Berber tftktst tfktstt you sprained it and then gave it rkkm rot imperf 17 18 Semai kckmrʔɛːc short fat arms 19 Coda Edit The coda also known as auslaut comprises the consonant sounds of a syllable that follow the nucleus The sequence of nucleus and coda is called a rime Some syllables consist of only a nucleus only an onset and a nucleus with no coda or only a nucleus and coda with no onset The phonotactics of many languages forbid syllable codas Examples are Swahili and Hawaiian In others codas are restricted to a small subset of the consonants that appear in onset position At a phonemic level in Japanese for example a coda may only be a nasal homorganic with any following consonant or in the middle of a word gemination of the following consonant On a phonetic level other codas occur due to elision of i and u In other languages nearly any consonant allowed as an onset is also allowed in the coda even clusters of consonants In English for example all onset consonants except h are allowed as syllable codas If the coda consists of a consonant cluster the sonority typically decreases from first to last as in the English word help This is called the sonority hierarchy or sonority scale 20 English onset and coda clusters are therefore different The onset str in strengths does not appear as a coda in any English word However some clusters do occur as both onsets and codas such as st in stardust The sonority hierarchy is more strict in some languages and less strict in others Open and closed Edit Checked syllable redirects here For checked syllables in Chinese see Checked tone A coda less syllable of the form V CV CCV etc V vowel C consonant is called an open syllable or free syllable while a syllable that has a coda VC CVC CVCC etc is called a closed syllable or checked syllable They have nothing to do with open and close vowels but are defined according to the phoneme that ends the syllable a vowel open syllable or a consonant closed syllable Almost all languages allow open syllables but some such as Hawaiian do not have closed syllables When a syllable is not the last syllable in a word the nucleus normally must be followed by two consonants in order for the syllable to be closed This is because a single following consonant is typically considered the onset of the following syllable For example Spanish casar to marry is composed of an open syllable followed by a closed syllable ca sar whereas cansar to get tired is composed of two closed syllables can sar When a geminate double consonant occurs the syllable boundary occurs in the middle e g Italian panna cream pan na cf Italian pane bread pa ne English words may consist of a single closed syllable with nucleus denoted by n and coda denoted by k in n ɪ k n cup n ʌ k p tall n ɔː k l milk n ɪ k lk tints n ɪ k nts fifths n ɪ k f8s sixths n ɪ k ks8s twelfths n ɛ k lf8s strengths n ɛ k ŋ8s English words may also consist of a single open syllable ending in a nucleus without a coda glue n uː pie n aɪ though n oʊ boy n ɔɪ A list of examples of syllable codas in English is found at English phonology Coda Null coda Edit Some languages such as Hawaiian forbid codas so that all syllables are open Suprasegmental features EditThe domain of suprasegmental features is the syllable or some larger unit but not a specific sound That is to say these features may effect more than a single segment and possibly all segments of a syllable Stress Tone Stod Suprasegmental palatalizationSometimes syllable length is also counted as a suprasegmental feature for example in some Germanic languages long vowels may only exist with short consonants and vice versa However syllables can be analyzed as compositions of long and short phonemes as in Finnish and Japanese where consonant gemination and vowel length are independent Tone Edit Main article Tone linguistics In most languages the pitch or pitch contour in which a syllable is pronounced conveys shades of meaning such as emphasis or surprise or distinguishes a statement from a question In tonal languages however the pitch affects the basic lexical meaning e g cat vs dog or grammatical meaning e g past vs present In some languages only the pitch itself e g high vs low has this effect while in others especially East Asian languages such as Chinese Thai or Vietnamese the shape or contour e g level vs rising vs falling also needs to be distinguished Accent Edit Main article Accent phonetics Syllable structure often interacts with stress or pitch accent In Latin for example stress is regularly determined by syllable weight a syllable counting as heavy if it has at least one of the following a long vowel in its nucleus a diphthong in its nucleus one or more codasIn each case the syllable is considered to have two morae The first syllable of a word is the initial syllable and the last syllable is the final syllable In languages accented on one of the last three syllables the last syllable is called the ultima the next to last is called the penult and the third syllable from the end is called the antepenult These terms come from Latin ultima last paenultima almost last and antepaenultima before almost last In Ancient Greek there are three accent marks acute circumflex and grave and terms were used to describe words based on the position and type of accent Some of these terms are used in the description of other languages Placement of accentAntepenult Penult UltimaTypeofaccent Circumflex properispomenon perispomenonAcute proparoxytone paroxytone oxytoneAny barytone History EditGuilhem Molinier a member of the Consistori del Gay Saber which was the first literary academy in the world and held the Floral Games to award the best troubadour with the violeta d aur top prize gave a definition of the syllable in his Leys d amor 1328 1337 a book aimed at regulating then flourishing Occitan poetry Sillaba votz es literals Segon los ditz gramaticals En un accen pronunciada Et en un trag d una alenada A syllable is the sound of several letters According to those called grammarians Pronounced in one accent And uninterruptedly in one breath See also EditEnglish phonology Phonotactics Covers syllable structure in English Entering tone IPA symbols for syllables Line poetry List of the longest English words with one syllable Minor syllable Mora linguistics Phonology Pitch accent Stress linguistics Syllabary writing system Syllabic consonant Syllabification Syllable computing Timing linguistics VocaleseReferences Edit de Jong Kenneth 2003 Temporal constraints and characterising syllable structuring In Local John Ogden Richard Temple Rosalind eds Phonetic Interpretation Papers in Laboratory Phonology VI Cambridge University Press pp 253 268 doi 10 1017 CBO9780511486425 015 ISBN 978 0 521 82402 6 Page 254 Walker Christopher B F 1990 Cuneiform Reading the Past Ancient Writing from Cuneiform to the Alphabet University of California Press British Museum ISBN 0 520 07431 9 as cited in Blainey Geoffrey 2002 A Short History of the World Chicago IL Dee p 60 ISBN 1 56663 507 1 Harper Douglas syllable Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved 2015 01 05 lambanw Liddell Henry George Scott Robert A Greek English Lexicon at the Perseus Project Smyth 1920 523 present stems formed by suffixes containing n International Phonetic Association December 1989 Report on the 1989 Kiel Convention International Phonetic Association Journal of the International Phonetic Association Cambridge University Press 19 2 75 76 doi 10 1017 S0025100300003868 S2CID 249412330 More generally the letter f indicates a prosodic foot of two syllables More generally the letter m indicates a mora For discussion of the theoretical existence of the syllable see CUNY Conference on the Syllable CUNY Phonology Forum CUNY Graduate Center Archived from the original on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 21 June 2022 Feng Shengli 2003 A Prosodic Grammar of Chinese University of Kansas p 3 Shibatani Masayoshi 1987 Japanese In Bernard Comrie ed The World s Major Languages Oxford University Press pp 855 80 ISBN 0 19 520521 9 Wells John C 1990 Syllabification and allophony In Ramsaran Susan ed Studies in the pronunciation of English a commemorative volume in honour of A C Gimson Abingdon UK Routledge pp 76 86 ISBN 9781138918658 Breen Gavan Pensalfini Rob 1999 Arrernte A Language with No Syllable Onsets PDF Linguistic Inquiry 30 1 1 25 doi 10 1162 002438999553940 JSTOR 4179048 S2CID 57564955 Wiese Richard 2000 Phonology of German Oxford University Press pp 58 61 ISBN 9780198299509 Bagemihl 1991 pp 589 593 627 Pellard Thomas 2010 Ōgami Miyako Ryukyuan In Shimoji Michinori ed An introduction to Ryukyuan languages PDF Fuchu Tokyo Research Institute for Languages and Cultures of Asia and Africa Tokyo University of Foreign Studies pp 113 166 ISBN 978 4 86337 072 2 Retrieved 21 June 2022 HAL hal 00529598 Dell amp Elmedlaoui 1985 Dell amp Elmedlaoui 1988 Sloan 1988 Harrington Jonathan Cox Felicity August 2014 Syllable and foot The syllable and phonotactic constraints Department of Linguistics Macquarie University Retrieved 21 June 2022 Sources and recommended reading EditBagemihl Bruce 1991 Syllable structure in Bella Coola Linguistic Inquiry 22 4 589 646 JSTOR 4178744 Clements George N Keyser Samuel J 1983 CV phonology a generative theory of the syllable Linguistic Inquiry Monographs Vol 9 Cambridge MA The MIT Press ISBN 9780262030984 Dell Francois Elmedlaoui Mohamed 1985 Syllabic consonants and syllabification in Imdlawn Tashlhiyt Berber Journal of African Languages and Linguistics 7 2 105 130 doi 10 1515 jall 1985 7 2 105 S2CID 29304770 Dell Francois Elmedlaoui Mohamed 1988 Syllabic consonants in Berber Some new evidence Journal of African Languages and Linguistics 10 1 17 doi 10 1515 jall 1988 10 1 1 S2CID 144470527 Ladefoged Peter 2001 A course in phonetics 4th ed Fort Worth TX Harcourt College Publishers ISBN 0 15 507319 2 Sloan Kerry 1988 Bare Consonant Reduplication Implications for a Prosodic Theory of Reduplication In Borer Hagit ed The Proceedings of the Seventh West Coast Conference on Formal Linguistics WCCFL 7 Irvine CA University of Chicago Press pp 319 330 ISBN 9780937073407 Smyth Herbert Weir 1920 A Greek Grammar for Colleges American Book Company Retrieved 1 January 2014 via CCEL External links EditSyllable Dictionary Look up the number of syllables in a word Learn to divide into syllables Hear it pronounced Do syllables have internal structure What is their status in phonology CUNY Phonology Forum Archived 2019 03 30 at the Wayback Machine Syllable Word Counter A comprehensive database of words and their syllables Syllable drill Listen to syllables and select its representation in Latin letters Syllable counter Count the number of syllables for any word or sentence Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Syllable amp oldid 1151375652, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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