[
UK
/fˌɒnəlˈɒdʒɪkəl/
]
[ US /ˌfoʊnəˈɫɑdʒɪkəɫ/ ]
[ US /ˌfoʊnəˈɫɑdʒɪkəɫ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
of or relating to phonology
the phonological component of language
How To Use phonological In A Sentence
- The interpretation of our experiment is also corroborated by results of other studies of the functional anatomy of phonological processing.
- It shows a composite semantic unit paired with a phonologically unanalysable unit.
- Finally, it is important to acknowledge the logical possibility that phonological recoding may operate differently across different orthographies.
- These results suggest that the acquisition of phonological skills is a necessary step in building the orthographic lexicon.
- In addition, the English-Greek children also outperformed their Greek/English counterparts in phoneme awareness tasks, suggesting that learning an alphabetic language as a first one (English) promotes the level of phonological awareness (phonemic awareness). Reading Development in Two Different Contexts:the Case of the English-greek Bilingual Children in UK and in Cyprus « Articles « Literacy News
- There may certainly be independent grounds for categorizing segments as vowels or consonants, in terms of their inherent sonority and phonological dependence, for example.
- Later, Baddeley made contributions to the literature on the neuropsychology of memory, first in the field of amnesia and subsequently with respect to patients with impairments in phonological or articulatory functioning.
- Similar to the Raskind and Higgins study, the present research also found significant increases in phonological awareness (i.e., phonological elision and nonword reading).
- The interpretation of our experiment is also corroborated by results of other studies of the functional anatomy of phonological processing.
- In French, as well as in deep orthographies like English, some transcriptions are best represented at the morpheme level rather than at the phonological level.