Dinamika Bahasa dan Budaya
Vol 7 No 2 (2012)

ENGLISH PHONOLOGICAL PROCESSES A STUDY OF GENERATIVE PHONOLOGY THEORY

J Sutomo (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
02 Jul 2012

Abstract

English phonological processes happen both in word and phrase levels. In the word level, it occurs when a morpheme is combined with another morpheme. One of the sound will experience a change because of the influence of the other morpheme. The English phonological process  also occurs in  a phrase level. This change is caused by the influence of syntactic factors. This study aims at explaining the forms of phonological processes of English language that occur in word level, concerning the processes of assimilation  and some other morpho-phonemic changes. In explaining the phonological processes, the writer uses the Generative Phonology Theory which is firstly introduced by Noam Chomsky in 1957. The Generative School of Phonology was founded by Noam Chomsky in the late 1950s.  Its basic premises are that phonological structure reflects the linguistic competence of the individual native speaker to compute a phonetic representation for the potentially infinite number of sentences generated by the syntactic component of the grammar.   Key words: phonological processes, assimilation, morpho-phonemic changes, generative phonology, linguistic competence.

Copyrights © 2012






Journal Info

Abbrev

fbib1

Publisher

Subject

Humanities Education Languange, Linguistic, Communication & Media Social Sciences

Description

Dinamika Bahasa dan Budaya is journal published by Fakultas Bahasa dan Ilmu Budaya (FBIB) Unisbank Semarang. It is a double-blind peer-reviewed journal dedicated to enhancing and disseminating scholarly work in the form of conceptual and research-based articles within the fields of Linguistics and ...