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fonologia

Fonologia is the branch of linguistics that studies the systematic organization of sounds in languages. It investigates how languages differentiate meaning through sound contrasts and how sound systems are structured beyond isolated phonetic realization. It focuses on abstract sound units, such as phonemes, and on the rules that govern their distribution and interaction within a language.

Key concepts include the distinction between phoneme and allophone, the use of minimal pairs to establish contrast,

Theoretical approaches range from classic rule-based phonology, which derives surface forms from underlying representations via rules,

Applications include language description and typology, language acquisition research, orthography design, and speech technology such as

and
the
study
of
phonotactics,
syllable
structure,
and
prosody
(stress,
rhythm,
and
intonation).
Fonology
analyzes
how
phonemes
contrast
to
distinguish
words,
how
sounds
change
in
different
phonological
environments,
and
how
languages
permit
or
constrain
combinations
of
sounds.
It
also
examines
natural
classes,
phonological
processes
such
as
assimilation,
epenthesis,
lenition,
and
metathesis,
and
how
these
processes
contribute
to
the
regularity
of
a
language’s
sound
system.
to
constraint-based
models
like
Optimality
Theory,
which
selects
the
best
candidate
according
to
ranking
of
universal
constraints.
Other
strands
include
autosegmental
phonology
and
various
analyses
of
prosody.
Phonology
interacts
with
morpho-phonology,
describing
how
phonological
alternations
relate
to
morphology
and
word
formation.
synthesis
and
recognition.
Data
are
gathered
through
fieldwork
and
corpora,
transcribed
with
the
International
Phonetic
Alphabet,
and
analyzed
comparatively
across
languages
to
identify
universals
and
variation.