Tuesday, September 27, 2011

BLOG#3

1. UNbalance 
 UNcompatible
 INcomplete
INdecent
 UNglorious
UNgratitude
ILlegal
ILliterate
IMmature
 IMperfect
 IMpossible
IRrational
 IRresponsible
 INsane
 DIStolerant
UNvariable

The reason some of the prefixes are different is because of there roots. Prefixes are simply the befores and an add on to these words but they are all different. This all has to do with there roots or base.


2. The Case of the Shifting Plural Suffix

The use of the plural -s has three different ways of pronunciation.
a. The plural sounds like /s/ for words like bat, book, cough, and ship.
b. However, it sounds like /z/ for words like cab, cave, lad, rag, and thing.
c. And the plural sounds like /ez/ for words like bus, bush, church, judge, and maze.

First, identify the phoneme that comes just before the plural in each of these words.

Now, can you discover what these sets of sounds (the final phoneme of the word and the phoneme for the type of plural it uses) have in common?

The one thing they have in common is the sound. They both make a word plural and have a /s/ or /z/ sound. These are both the phonetic styles but it works. Some actually sound more vocied with a /z/ and the rest are almost voicless with /s/.


Sunday, September 18, 2011

HW Post #2

1 - CARLOS
    [K a r l o s]

2 - The first syllable of "Carlos" is "K" a voiceless alveolar velar with a stop. The next syllable is a vowel, an "a" which is Low, central. The next syllable is "r" a voiced, alveolar liquid. The next is a "l" which also is a voiced, alveolar liquid syllable. The next is a vowel "o" which is mid back. the last syllable is an "s" which is a voiceless alveolar fricatives. 


3 -  I would start by saying  "to say my name my name, you start by raising your tongue toward the alveolar in the front of the mouth to make an "k" sound and then make an "a" sound, then put your tongue towards the front of your mouth towards your alveolar and make a "r" sound with an "l" sound, then make a "o" sound, and finally let your tongue hit the alveolar and stopping the airstream, to make a "s" sound. Put it all together and you get "Kar-Los."

Sunday, September 11, 2011

HW Post 1

Hey my name is Carlos Jr, my family is from Ecuador and Europe, the reason i only say Europe is because we are from all over and don't exactly know everywhere. the language i speak mainly is English but i understand Spanish as well. In high school i tried to learn Spanish and kind of did but didn't practice it so i barely used it. When I'm at home my father talks to me in Spanish and i can understand him. somehow i was able to pick up some words to the extent where i learned a lot. The language i use in school is the one i use everywhere. Like i said i understand Spanish but barely talk it.

The way i learn language or people learn language is just by picking up sounds and meanings. We all know words meanings changed over a course of years but we still use them today. To me Language "happens" just by feeling. One day someone will say a word having one meaning but to someone else it will mean a complete different thing. My hypothesis is that language happens to grow by dialects and slang. We all can learn a proper language but we also learn the slang. For example Spanish, Spaniards, people from Spain, speak proper Spanish like by the book, but people in South America like Ecuador speak a slang Spanish. Learning a second language is sort of difficult. I feel it is because for me i compare the words and compare the translation. It may not just be me, maybe others have this problem too but i have this issue. Only thing i wonder is how it forms? like what does a couple of letters put together make a word?