Lecture 1 Phonetics as a Linguistic Science Plan



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4. Phonosemantics

Phonosemantics is a relatively new branch of phonetics that has arisen quite recently and is now in great flourish. Phonosemantics studies how phonetic features (sounds and intonation) affect the realization of meaning in different contexts and communication circumstances.

The meaning of every word in every language is in part inherent in its form. Individual phonemes and phonetic features are meaning-bearing. They each have a unique semantics. Every word which contains a given phoneme bears an element of meaning which is absent in words not containing this phoneme. In addition, all phonemes which have a common phonetic feature also have a common element of meaning. The effect of the phoneme-meaning varies with the position that the phoneme bears within the syllable.

On the most fundamental level, a word is a reflection of its articulation. The presence of a given phoneme in a word has a very specific semantic effect. This effect tends to resemble the articulation of the relevant phoneme.

M. Magnus - on the basis of study of the Natural Class words - came to the following conclusions. The physical forces and their reflection in word

semantics can be abstracted away from the Natural Class to which the word is assigned. The more concrete and unambiguous the referent for the word, the more difficult it is to fit into a phonosemantic classification. If the referent for a word by its very nature is connotative or interpretive, then the word's phonosemantics can cooperate with its referent. For example, "slide" is a smooth motion. The smoothness and slipperiness so common in /sl/ shows up in the actual referent for "slide". If, however, the word refers to some very concrete and identifiable object in the world, then the phonosemantics of the word seems to impose a connotation or interpretation on the word rather than affecting what the word actually refers to. For example, the referent for "dog" is an animal. Its referent is not that of an ugly animal. The dreariness which appears disproportionately in words containing /d/ manifests in "dog" as a connotation superimposed on the word "dog".

The position that a consonant occupies in a syllable also affects its meaning. Consonants that appear before the vowel form the backdrop for the action of the word, and consonants that appear after the vowel express the result of the action implicit in the word.

Inclusion of a linguistic form in the context of other similar forms limits the semantic range of that form. For example, when one puts the word "take" in the context "take up", only one part of its semantic potential is being made use of. If one puts it in the context "take over", then a different part of its semantic potential is being highlighted. This also happens on the phoneme level. For example, "drown" and "drip" emphasize the downwardness and wateriness in /d/, whereas "dim" and "daunt" emphasizes its diminishing. Since not all aspects of a phoneme meaning are equally salient in every word, we have to look at all the words to become familiar with the meaning of the phoneme.

With few exceptions, the various senses of a word are interrelated by metaphoric extension, hyponymy and other semantic processes. There is an analogous process on the level of the phoneme.

Placing a word in a context imposes on it a limited function. A dictionary sense is nothing more than a heuristic description of a range of related functions that this word is commonly used for. In fact, every novel context (phrase or sentence) which a word appears in defines for it a new sense. What determines what a word refers to is how the word must be used.

Certain sounds cause changes in the meaning of a word and phrase. Hereby a general impression from the text is formed on the basis of extra-linguistic factors and its outer form (phonemic structure). It can also be influenced by key words which make a meaningful frame of the text. Thus, such words may be accurately chosen and introduced in the text deliberately to enlarge the number of phonemes which possess a certain (desired) phonetic meaning. In phono-semantic experiments such words are specially constructed from phonemes with definite phonetic meaning.

The semantic value of sounds is illustrated in nonsense verse, for example, in Lewis Carrol's "Jabberwocky":

Twas brilling, and the slithy toves

Did gyre and gimble in the wabe:

All mimsy were the borogroves,

And the mome raths outgrabe.

The repetition of sounds similar in articulation gives special prominence and additional expressiveness to the sentence:



And I've lost you, lost myself

(Robert Browning "Men and Women")


His voice lifted into the whine of virtuous recrimination

(William Golding "Lord of the Flies")



But my darling he protested in the cajoling tone

of one who implores a child to behave reasonably

(Aldous Huxley "Point Counter Point")

Any text can be investigated from the point of view of its phonetic filling. Apart from segmental features, suprasegmental (intonational) phenomena condition the realization of the semantic potential of the text as a whole. This area of phonetic studies is open for further investigation and judgement.


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