What is phonological alternation?, A change in meaning, A phoneme appears differently depending on its environment, A word changes spelling, A sentence becomes longer, In the example /p/ in “spit” vs “pit”, the difference is due to…, Morphology, Syntax, Phonetic environment, Word class, Which of the following is one of the three key concepts?, Grammar, Process, Vocabulary, Phrase, What is process in Phonology?, The final sound, The meaning of a word, The phonological operation responsible, The spelling rule, Phonetically conditioned alternation is…, Optional and irregular, Triggered automatically by phonetic environment, Only found in specific words, Based on meaning, Which type requires both phonetic environment AND morpheme boundary?, Suppletion, Phonetically conditioned, Phonetically + morphologically conditioned, Lexical, Which type is restricted to specific lexical items?, Type 1 , Type 2, Type 3, Type 4, Suppletion means..., Sounds become similar, Sounds are deleted, No phonological relationship between forms, Sounds change in position, Productive alternations are those that..., Apply to new words, Are always optional, Are irregular, Are limited to old words, Language-specific alternations mean..., All languages behave the same, Alternations only happen in English, Different languages follow different rules, Alternations are random.

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