ALLOMORPH


:''This article is about a lingustic term. See Pseudomorph for another meaning of the word.''
An 'allomorph' is a linguistics term for a variant form of a morpheme. The concept occurs when a unit of meaning can vary in sound (phonologically) without changing meaning. It is used in linguistics to explain the comprehension of variations in sound for a specific morpheme.

Contents
Allomorphy in English Suffixes
Stem Allomorphy
History
See also
References

Allomorphy in English Suffixes


English has several morphemes that vary in sound but not in meaning. Examples include the past tense and the plural morphemes.
For example, in English, a past tense morpheme is -ed. It occurs in several allomorphs depending on its phonological environment, assimilating voicing of the previous segment or inserting a schwa when following an alveolar stop:

★ as in verbs that end with the alveolar stops or , such as 'hunted' [] or 'banded' []

★ as in verbs that end with voiceless phonemes other than , such as 'fished' []

★ as in verbs that end with voiced phonemes other than , such as 'buzzed' []
Notice the "other than" restrictions above. This is a common fact about allomorphy: if the allomorphy conditions are ordered from most restrictive (in this case, after an alveolar stop) to least restrictive, then the first matching case usually "wins". Thus, the above conditions could be re-written as follows:

★ as in verbs that end with the alveolar stops or

★ as in verbs that end with voiceless phonemes

★ as in verbs
The fact that the allomorph does not appear after stem-final , despite the fact that the latter is voiceless, is then explained by the fact that appears in that environment, together with the fact that the environments are ordered. Likewise, the fact that the allomorph does not appear after stem-final is due to the fact that the earlier clause for the allomorph takes priority; and the fact that the allomorph does not appear after stem-final voiceless phonemes is due to the fact that the preceding clause for the takes priority.
Irregular past tense forms, such as "broke" or "was/ were", can be seen as still more specific cases (since they are confined to certain lexical items, like the verb "break"), which therefore take priority over the general cases listed above.

Stem Allomorphy


Allomorphy can also exist in stems or roots, as in Classic Sanskrit:
'Vāk' (voice)
'Singular''Plural'
Nominative
Genitive
Instrumental
Locative

There are three allomorphs of the stem: , and . The allomorphs are conditioned by the particular case-marking suffixes.
The form of the stem , found in the nominative singular and locative plural, is the etymological form of the morpheme. Pre-Indic palatalization of velars resulted in the variant form , which was initially phonologically conditioned. This conditioning can still be seen in the Locative Singular form, where the is followed by the high front vowel .
But subsequent merging of and into made the alternation unpredictable on phonetic grounds in the Genitive case (both Singular and Plural), as well as the Nominative Plural and Instrumental Singular. Hence, this allomorphy was no longer directly relatable to phonological processes.
Phonological conditioning also accounts for the form found in the Instrumental Plural, where the assimilates in voicing to the following .

History


The term was originally used to describe variations in chemical structure. It was first applied to language (in writing) in 1948, by E.A. Nida in Language XXIV. [1]

See also



Alternation (linguistics)

Consonant mutation

Grassmann's Law

Allophone

References


1. Oxford English Dictionary Online: Entry 50006103. Accessed: 2006-09-05


Principles and Methods for Historical Linguistics, Jeffers, Robert J. and Lehiste, Ilse, , , MIT Press, 1979,

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