Difference between revisions of "Diphthong"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
m (cat:phonetics cat:phonology) |
m (→Related terms: typo "triphtong") |
||
Line 18: | Line 18: | ||
===Related terms=== | ===Related terms=== | ||
*[[monophthong]] (a vowel whose quality does not change) | *[[monophthong]] (a vowel whose quality does not change) | ||
− | *[[ | + | *[[triphthong]] (a vowel whose quality changes twice during its pronunciation) |
*[[diphthongization]] | *[[diphthongization]] | ||
Revision as of 20:15, 29 November 2007
A diphthong is a vowel whose quality changes significantly in one direction during its pronunciation.
- "When the medial phase shows an audible change of quality, with the change consistently progressing toward a single target, as it were, then the sound is classified as a diphthong." (Laver 1994:146)
Examples
[ai] in English wine, [au] in English house.
Comments
Often phonologists do not agreee whether a tautosyllabic sequence of two sounds is a diphthong or a sequence of vowel plus glide, or glide plus vowel.
Subtypes
Origin
From Greek di-phthongos [two-sound]. The word is first attested in English in the 15th century.
Related terms
- monophthong (a vowel whose quality does not change)
- triphthong (a vowel whose quality changes twice during its pronunciation)
- diphthongization
References
- Laver, John. 1994. Principles of phonetics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Other languages
German Diphthong (de) Czech dvouhláska