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Minimal Pair
A minimal pair is a pair of two distinct words that differ by only one phoneme. For example, fan (IPA: fæn) and van (IPA: væn) are minimal pairs because they are different words that differ only by one phoneme (here, /f/ and /v/). However, spider (IPA: spaɪɾəɹ) and spiders (IPA: spaɪɾəɹz) are not a minimal pair because "spiders" has more phonemes than "spider."
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Psychology
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
Related
Phonemic restoration effect
Words (linguistics)
IPA
Properties of Phonemes
Minimal Pair
Transcription (Linguistics)
A language learner observes that changing the initial sound in the word 'pat' to a different sound can create the words 'bat' and 'cat'. However, they also notice that saying the word 'water' with a sharp 't' sound or a softer 'd'-like sound (as is common in some dialects) does not change the word's core meaning. Which statement best analyzes this observation based on the principles of how speech sounds function in a language?