Saturday, 18 May 2024, 6:39 PM
Site: SISU-eLearning网上课堂
Course: MA Morphology School of English Studies (Morphology 2017)
Glossary: Glossary: morphology and phonology
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Oblique case

Oblique cases are all morphological cases apart from the most basic ones (e.g. all but the nominative and accusative).

Obstruent

A non-sonorant consonant like fricatives and stops (including implosives, ejective stops, clicks, fricatives, ejective fricatives, affricates, ejective affricates, affricated clicks). All obstruents have a major constriction of the airflow in the oral tract.

Octave

A doubling of the fundamental frequency.

Offset

Coda, especially word coda.

Onset

The part of the syllable preceding the vowel, e.g. in the syllable /pak/, the consonant /p/ forms the onset.

Open

A lower variant of a vowel, as in open-mid [ε] as opposed to close-mid [e]. Contrast close.

Open syllable

A syllable without a consonant at the end, like the first syllables in English beehive, bylaw, sawing. Contrast closed syllable.

Open-mid

See mid.

Optative

In mood systems, the mood that is used to express a desire or wish for some event to occur.

Optimality Theory

Optimality Theory argues that inputs (underlying forms) and outputs (phonetic forms) are related through a mechanism that evaluates how well different possible outputs (called candidates) satisfy the constraint hierarchy of a language.

Overextension

Term that refers to the use of a word to refer to objects or individuals that are typically covered by the word, as well as to others that are perceptually similar. For example, a child might use the word dog to refer to all animals that walk on all fours. Contrast underextension.

Overtone

See harmonic.