Phonetics and phonology are like the rules and the sounds of a language, one is about how things are made, the other about how they’re used.
Phonetics is all about how sounds are made. It's like looking at how your mouth works when you talk. For example, when you say “cat,” your tongue touches the roof of your mouth to make the /k/ sound. That’s phonetics, it’s about what happens in your body.
Phonology, on the other hand, is about how sounds are used in a language. It's like the rules of a game. In English, the /p/ sound at the beginning of “pat” is different from the /b/ sound in “bat.” But in some languages, those two sounds might be treated the same way, it’s all about how people use them.
Sounds and Rules
Think of phonetics as the tools you use to make a sound, like blocks or crayons. Phonology is more like the instructions for building something with those tools, what counts as a “word” or how sounds can change depending on where they are in a sentence.
So, phonetics is about how sounds work, and phonology is about why they matter. Phonetics and phonology are like the rules and the sounds of a language, one is about how things are made, the other about how they’re used.
Phonetics is all about how sounds are made. It's like looking at how your mouth works when you talk. For example, when you say “cat,” your tongue touches the roof of your mouth to make the /k/ sound. That’s phonetics, it’s about what happens in your body.
Phonology, on the other hand, is about how sounds are used in a language. It's like the rules of a game. In English, the /p/ sound at the beginning of “pat” is different from the /b/ sound in “bat.” But in some languages, those two sounds might be treated the same way, it’s all about how people use them.
Examples
- Understanding why 'cat' and 'bat' sound different involves phonetics, while knowing they are both words is phonology.
- Phonetics is like learning how to sing, while phonology is about the song's structure.
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See also
- How Does The Language Sounds That Could Exist, But Don't Work?
- How Does Phonetics and Phonology: Introduction Work?
- What is dissimilation?
- What is phonotactic?
- What are ejectives?