Phonology
Phonology is the branch of linguistics that studies the systematic organization of sounds in languages. It focuses on the ways sounds function within a given language or languages to encode meaning, as opposed to phonetics, which concerns the physical properties of speech sounds. Phonology analyzes the inventory of distinct sounds, or phonemes, and the rules that determine how these sounds can combine and change in different contexts. It also examines allophones, the context-dependent realizations of a phoneme that do not change meaning.
Key concepts include phonemes, allophones, phonotactics, and prosody. Phonotactics describes allowable sound sequences and syllable structure,
Historically, phonology has evolved from the identification of phonemes in the early 20th century to more formal
Phonology interacts with other areas of linguistics, including morphology, syntax, and sociolinguistics, and is studied across