Open main menu
Home
Random
Recent changes
Special pages
Community portal
Preferences
About Wikipedia
Disclaimers
Incubator escapee wiki
Search
User menu
Talk
Dark mode
Contributions
Create account
Log in
Editing
Minimal pair
(section)
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
==Types== In addition to the minimal pairs of vowels and consonants provided above, others may be found: ===Quantity=== Many languages show contrasts between long and short vowels and consonants. A distinctive difference in length is attributed by some phonologists to a unit called a [[chroneme]]. Thus, [[Italian language|Italian]] has the following minimal pair that is based on long and short {{IPA|/l/}}: {|class="wikitable" ! spelling || IPA ||meaning |- | {{lang|it|pala}} ||{{IPA|/ˈpala/}}|| shovel |- | {{lang|it|palla}} ||{{IPA|/ˈpalla/}} || ball |} However, in such a case it is not easy to decide whether a long vowel or consonant should be treated as having an added chroneme or simply as a [[geminate]] sound with phonemes. [[Classical Latin]], [[German language|German]], some [[Languages of Italy|Italian dialects]], almost all [[Uralic languages]], [[Thai language|Thai]], and many other languages also have distinctive length in [[vowel]]s. An example is the ''cŭ/cū'' minimal pair in the Italian dialect that is spoken near [[Palmi, Calabria|Palmi]] (Calabria, Italy){{clarify|date=May 2023|reason=Please specify the name of the dialect}}: {|class="wikitable" ! Dialect spoken in Palmi || IPA || Quality || Etymology || Latin || Italian || English |- | Cŭ voli? || {{IPA|/kuˈvɔːli/}} || short || cŭ < lat. ''qu(is)'' ("who?") || Quis vult? || Chi vuole? || Who wants? |- | Cū voli? || {{IPA|/kuːˈvɔːli/}} || long || cū < lat. ''qu(o) (ill)ŭ(m)'' ("for-what him?") || Quō illum/illud vult? || Per che cosa lo vuole? || For what (reason) does he want him/it? |} ====Syntactic gemination==== In some languages like Italian, word-initial consonants are [[geminate]]d after certain vowel-final words in the same [[prosodic unit]]. Sometimes, the phenomenon can create some [[syntactic gemination|syntactic-gemination]]-minimal-pairs: {|class="wikitable" ! Italian [[sandhi]] || IPA || Meaning || Sample sentence || Meaning of the sample sentence |- | {{lang|it|dà casa}} || {{IPA|/dakˈkaza/}} || (he/she) gives (his/her) house || ''{{lang|it|Carlo ci dà casa.}}'' || Carlo gives us his house. |- | {{lang|it|da casa}} || {{IPA|/daˈkaza/}} || from home || ''{{lang|it|Carlo uscì da casa.}}'' || Carlo got out from home. |} In the example, the graphical [[accent (phonetics)|accent]] on ''dà'' is just a [[diacritical mark]] that does not change the [[pronunciation]] of the word itself. However, in some specific areas, like [[Tuscan dialect|Tuscany]], both phrases are pronounced {{IPA|/daˈkkaːza/}} and so can be distinguished only from the context. ===Tone=== Minimal pairs for tone contrasts in [[tone language]]s can be established; some writers refer to that as a contrast involving a [[toneme]]. For example, [[Kono language (Sierra Leone)|Kono]], of Sierra Leone, distinguishes high tone and low tone on syllables:<ref>{{cite book |last1=Roach |first1=Peter |title=Phonetics |date=2001 |publisher=Oxford |isbn=978-0-19-437239-8 |page=25 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=79f9TdhF_L4C&pg=PA25}}</ref><ref>{{cite thesis |type=PhD |last=Manyeh |first=Morie Komba |date=1983 |title=Aspects of Kono Phonology |publisher=University of Leeds |url=http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/id/eprint/693 |page=152}}</ref> {|class="wikitable" ! tone || word ||meaning |- | high ||{{IPA|/kɔ́ɔ́/}}|| 'to mature' |- | low ||{{IPA|/kɔ̀ɔ̀/}} || 'rice' |} ===Stress=== Languages in which [[stress (linguistics)|stress]] may occur in different positions within the word often have contrasts that can be shown in minimal pairs, as in [[Greek language|Greek]] and [[Spanish language|Spanish]]: {|class="wikitable" ! word || language ||IPA || meaning |- | {{lang|el|ποτέ}} || Greek ||{{IPA|/poˈte/}} || ever |- | {{lang|el|πότε}} || Greek || {{IPA|/ˈpote/}} || when |- | {{lang|es|esta}} || Spanish || {{IPA|/ˈesta/}} || this (feminine) |- | {{lang|es|está}} || Spanish || {{IPA|/esˈta/}} || (he/she/it) is |- | {{lang|tl|supot}} || Tagalog || {{IPA|/ˈsupot/}} || bag |- | {{lang|tl|supót}} || Tagalog || {{IPA|/suˈpot/}} || uncircumcized |} In English stress can determine the part of speech of a word: ''insult'' as a noun is {{IPA|/ˈɪnsʌlt/}} while as a verb it is {{IPA|/ɪnˈsʌlt/}}. In certain cases it can also differentiate two words: ''below'' {{IPA|/bɪˈloʊ/}} vs ''billow'' {{IPA|/ˈbɪloʊ/}}. ===Juncture=== Anglophones can distinguish between, for example, "great ape" and "grey tape", but phonemically, the two phrases are identical: {{IPA|/ɡreɪteɪp/}}.<ref>O'Connor, J.D and Tooley, O. (1964) "The perceptibility of certain word-boundaries" in Abercrombie, D. et al ''In Honour of Daniel Jones'', Longman, pp. 171-176</ref> The difference between the two phrases, which constitute a minimal pair, is said to be one of [[juncture]]. At the word boundary, a "plus juncture" /+/ has been posited and said to be the factor conditioning allophones to allow distinctivity:<ref>{{cite book |last1=Trager |first1=G.L. |last2=Smith |first2=H.L. |title=An Outline of English Structure |date=1957 |publisher=American Council of Learned Societies |page=37}}</ref> in this example, the phrase "great ape" has an {{IPA|/eɪ/}} diphthong shortened by [[clipping (phonetics)|pre-fortis clipping]] and, since it is not syllable-initial, a {{IPA|/t/}} with little [[Aspirated consonant|aspiration]] (variously {{IPA|[t˭]}}, [[Flapping|{{IPA|[ɾ]|cat=no}}]], [[T-glottalization|{{IPA|[ʔt]|cat=no}}]], {{IPAblink|ʔ}}, etc., depending on dialect); meanwhile in "grey tape", the {{IPA|/eɪ/}} has its full length and the {{IPA|/t/}} is aspirated {{IPA|[tʰ]}}. Only languages with allophonic differences associated with grammatical boundaries may have juncture as a phonological element. There is disagreement over whether or not [[French language|French]] has phonological juncture: it seems likely that the difference between, for example, "{{lang|fr|des petits trous}}" (some little holes) and "{{lang|fr|des petites roues}}" (some little wheels), phonemically both {{IPA|/depətitʁu/}}, is only perceptible in slow, careful speech.<ref>Jones, D. (1931) 'The "word" as a phonetic entity', ''Le Maitre Phonetique'', 36, pp. 60-65 {{JSTOR|44704471}}</ref><ref>Passy, P. (1913) ''Les Sons du Français'', Didier, p. 61</ref>
Edit summary
(Briefly describe your changes)
By publishing changes, you agree to the
Terms of Use
, and you irrevocably agree to release your contribution under the
CC BY-SA 4.0 License
and the
GFDL
. You agree that a hyperlink or URL is sufficient attribution under the Creative Commons license.
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)