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Separated hierarchies for different research traditions, added citations for categories found in specific versions of hierarchies. |
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{{Short description|Size hierarchy of phonological units}}
The '''phonological hierarchy''' describes a series of increasingly smaller regions of a [[Phonology|phonological]] utterance, each nested within the next highest region. Different research traditions make use of slightly different hierarchies. For instance, there is one hierarchy which is primarily used in theoretical phonology, while a similar hierarchy is used in [[
==Theoretical phonological hierarchy==
Listed in order from highest to lowest are the categories of the hierarchy that
#[[Utterance]] ([[
# Intonational phrase (I-phrase
#* Full intonational phrase<ref name="pierrehumbert1988">{{cite book |
#Phonological phrase (P-phrase, [[Φ]]),<ref name="
#* Major phrase<ref name="selkirk1996" />
#* Intermediate intonational phrase<ref name="pierrehumbert1988" />
#Accentual phrase,<ref name="pierrehumbert1988" />
#* Minor phrase<ref name="selkirk1996" />
#[[Clitic]] group ([[C]])<ref name="
#[[Phonological word]] (P-word, [[ω]]), sometimes also called the '''prosodic word'''<ref name="
#[[Foot (linguistics)|Foot]] (F, [[φ]] or [[Σ]])<ref name="
#[[Syllable]] ([[Sigma|σ]])<ref name="
#[[Mora (linguistics)|Mora]] ([[μ]])<ref name="selkirk1996" />
#Segment ([[phoneme]])
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# Segment ([[phoneme]])
# [[Distinctive feature|Feature]]
==See also==
*[[Phonetic word]]
==References==
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