Creating A Language - Part 3 - Syllable Structure

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

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Now that we have chosen our sounds, we need to figure out a few rules of morphology. Morphology is a wide field that in a given language has a lot of rules, so we are only going to think about a few. Even so, this is going to take a few parts to get through.
For starters, morphology is the study of the pattern of when certain sounds occur in a word or collection of words. For instance, a rule of English morphology is that we cannot have stops before nasals at the beginning of a word. "knife" has a silent k because it is a borrowed word, but the kn combination is not allowed (but it is in other languages, such as German). Another rule of English is that when we make plurals, that s can be an s, z, or ez. fish goes to /fishez/, cat goes to /cats/, and dog goes to /dogz/. /t/ is voiceless, so it gets voiceless /s/. /g/ is voiced, so it gets voiced /z/. And sh is a sibilant like an s, so you can't have sh and s next to each other, hence the insertion of the vowel. And then the s there becomes a z because the vowel is voiced.

In this part, we are going to begin looking at the syllable structure.

Syllable structure is looking at what combinations of vowels or consonants are allowed in a single syllable. Consonants and vowels are of course represented by present phonemes, not spelling.

English has a really lenient syllable structure. Pretty much everything is fair game.

We have:
I: V (diphthongs count as one syllable)
we: CV
tar: CVC
star: CCVC
start: CCVCC
are: VC
art: VCC
stray: CCCV
strait: CCCVC
strength: CCCVCC
sixth: CVCCC

(the plural s can make this even more dramatic, ie sixths, but morpheme -s is a special case, I hear).

Because all of these are allowable, but no consonant is required, English's syllable structure is (C)(C)(C)V(C)(C)(C) (or (C)(C)(C)V(C)(C)(C)(C) if you count that plural s). But this is not exactly normal for languages.

Let's look at Japanese (i will do this using multi syllable words):

a-ta-shi V-CV-CV
tsun-de-re: CVC-CV-CV*
un: VC

*I believe ts is an affricate, in which case, tsun would be CVC.

So Japanese's syllable structure is (C)V(C), with a nasal being the only acceptable consonant for the final one.

Some languages never allow the syllable final consonant and have the structure (C)V.

Some languages never allow the syllable final consonant and always require the initial consonant, and have the structure CV.

Some languages allow the syllable final consonant and always require the initial consonant, and have the structure CV(C).

Hopefully you understand the possible combinations now.
(Some languages defy syllable structure as we know it, but we aren't going to get into that).

 Figure out what combinations you want to be able to make with your chosen phonemes, and choose a syllable structure. While you can do something as free as English, I urge you to experiment with a more limited structure. In the next lesson, I will talk a bit more about how syllables work together to create acceptable words of a given structure.

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