Phonotactics (in Greek phone = voice and tactic = course) is a branch of phonology that deals with restrictions in a language on the permissible combinations of phonemes. Phonotactics defines permissible syllable structure, consonant clusters, and vowel sequences by means of phonotactical constraints.
For example, in Japanese, consonant clusters like are not allowed, although they are in English. Similarly, the sounds and are not permitted at the beginning of a word in Modern English but are in German and Dutch.
Syllables have the following internal segmental structure:
Both onset and coda may be empty (a vowel-only syllable).
The English syllable (and word) twelfths is divided into the onset , the nucleus , and the coda , and it can thus be described as CCVCCCC (C = consonant, V = vowel). On this basis it is possible to form rules for which representations of phoneme classes may fill the cluster. For instance, English allows at most three consonants in an onset, but phonemes in a three-consonantical onset are strictly limited to the following scheme:
This constraint can be observed in the pronunciation of the word blue: Originally, the vowel of blue was identical to the vowel of cue, approximately . In most dialects of English, shifted to . Theoretically, this would produce **. The cluster however, infringes the constraint for three-consonantal onsets in English. Therefore, the pronunciation has been reduced to by elision of the [j.
Note that those English dialects that preserve the pronunciations * for cue have also preserved the pronunciation for blue. Other languages don't share the same constraint, compare Spanish pliegue .
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"Phonotactics".
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