Showing posts with label Bloomfield. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bloomfield. Show all posts

Saturday, May 1, 2010

Early thoughts of Bloomfield about the phoneme

Hi Everybody,

Here's something you may not know about Leonard Bloomfield's approach of the phoneme:


V. Phonemes:
15. Assumption 4. Different morphemes may be alike or partly alike as to vocal features.
Thus book : table [b]; stay : west [st]; -er (agent) : -er (comparative).
The assumption implies that the meanings are different.
16. Def. A minimum same of vocal feature is a phoneme or distinctive sound.
As for instance, English [b, s, t], the English normal word-stress, the Chinese tones.
17. The number of different phonemes in a language is a small sub-multiple of the number of forms.
18. Every form is made up wholly of phonemes.



Citation from
Bloomfield, Leonard. ‘A set of postulates for the science of language’. Language 2: 153-164, 1926
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What is most disconcerting is that phoneme, (distinctive or vocal) feature, stress and tone are put exactly on the same level: they are the basic phonological components that combine to make up forms. It can be noted that phoneme in Bloomfield (1926) is synonymous with feature and is not yet a bundle of features belonging to a superior or different level of the description.
So
Isn't this unexpected ?



Best Wishes


A.