Definition:
The Sonority Sequencing Principle (SSP) states that in any syllable, sonority (the relative loudness and openness of a sound) must rise from the onset to the nucleus and fall from the nucleus to the coda. In practice, this means that the vowel at the center of a syllable is the most sonorous element, and consonants at the edges are less sonorous. This principle governs which consonant clusters are permissible in a language.
In-Depth Explanation
Sonority hierarchy (from least to most sonorous):
- Voiceless stops (/p, t, k/) — least sonorous
- Voiced stops (/b, d, g/)
- Voiceless fricatives (/f, s, ʃ/)
- Voiced fricatives (/v, z/)
- Nasals (/m, n, ŋ/)
- Liquids (/l, r/)
- Glides (/w, j/)
- Vowels (/a, i, u, e, o/) — most sonorous
Under the SSP, a well-formed syllable onset must rise in sonority toward the vowel:
- “play” /pl-eɪ/ — stop → liquid → vowel: ✓ sonority rises
- “spray” /spr-eɪ/ — fricative → stop → liquid → vowel: ✓ rises (with /s/ as a special case)
- “lp-” would be ill-formed — liquid → stop: ✗ sonority falls before the vowel
The SSP explains why certain consonant clusters feel “pronounceable” across languages and others don’t.
SSP and Japanese:
Japanese has extremely strict syllable structure — overwhelmingly (C)V (consonant + vowel) or V (vowel alone), with very limited codas (only the moraic nasal /ɴ/ and the first half of geminates). This means Japanese essentially maximally satisfies the SSP: every syllable rises directly from (at most) one consonant to a vowel. No complex onsets, no complex codas, no consonant clusters to evaluate.
This is why Japanese learners of English struggle with English consonant clusters: clusters like /str-/ (“street”), /spl-/ (“splash”), or /-lpts/ (“sculpts”) don’t map onto Japanese syllable structure at all. The typical adaptation strategy is vowel epenthesis — inserting vowels to break up clusters: “street” → /sɯtoɾiːto/ (ストリート). Each inserted vowel creates a new CV syllable, satisfying Japanese phonotactic constraints.
Related Terms
See Also
Research
- Selkirk, E. O. (1984). On the major class features and syllable theory. In M. Aronoff & R. Oehrle (Eds.), Language Sound Structure (pp. 107–136). MIT Press. — Formal statement of the SSP and its role in syllable theory.
- Clements, G. N. (1990). The role of the sonority cycle in core syllabification. In J. Kingston & M. E. Beckman (Eds.), Between the Grammar and Physics of Speech (pp. 283–333). Cambridge University Press. — Influential refinement of the SSP with cross-linguistic evidence.