en:grammar:phonology_and_spelling
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| en:grammar:phonology_and_spelling [2022-11-17 19:39] – [Consonants] Fix chart christian | en:grammar:phonology_and_spelling [2023-02-01 10:48] (current) – [Syllable structure and hyphenation] No diphthong–vowel sequences christian | ||
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| The vowels may be considered as arranged in the following chart: | The vowels may be considered as arranged in the following chart: | ||
| - | ^ | + | ^ |
| - | ^ close | i | | + | ^ Close | i | |
| - | ^ mid | e | | + | ^ Mid | e | |
| - | ^ open | + | ^ Open |
| //Notes:// | //Notes:// | ||
| Line 42: | Line 42: | ||
| //Notes:// | //Notes:// | ||
| - | * To see diphthong frequencies, | + | * To see diphthong frequencies, |
| * The use of the apostrophe as a vowel separator is inspired by [[wp> | * The use of the apostrophe as a vowel separator is inspired by [[wp> | ||
| * Some linguists distinguish between " | * Some linguists distinguish between " | ||
| Line 65: | Line 65: | ||
| * **s** /s/ as in ' | * **s** /s/ as in ' | ||
| * **t** /t/ as in ' | * **t** /t/ as in ' | ||
| - | * **w** /w/ as in ' | + | * **v** /w/ as in ' |
| * **x** /ʃ/ as in ' | * **x** /ʃ/ as in ' | ||
| * **y** /j/ as in ' | * **y** /j/ as in ' | ||
| Line 78: | Line 78: | ||
| * The combination **ts** may be pronounced as /ts/ – the sequence of the two consonants which these two letters usually represent – or as the single consonant /t͡s/ (voiceless alveolar sibilant affricate), as in Mandarin 早 (zǎo) or Russian царь (carʹ). Either pronunciation is fine. For the purposes of hyphenation, | * The combination **ts** may be pronounced as /ts/ – the sequence of the two consonants which these two letters usually represent – or as the single consonant /t͡s/ (voiceless alveolar sibilant affricate), as in Mandarin 早 (zǎo) or Russian царь (carʹ). Either pronunciation is fine. For the purposes of hyphenation, | ||
| - | The letters **q, v** and **z** are not used, except in proper names and foreign words. | + | The letters **q, w** and **z** are not used, except in proper names and foreign words. |
| The following chart shows all the non-optional consonants: | The following chart shows all the non-optional consonants: | ||
| Line 87: | Line 87: | ||
| ^ Fricative | ^ Fricative | ||
| ^ Affricate | ^ Affricate | ||
| - | ^ Lat. | | | ||
| ^ Rhotic | ^ Rhotic | ||
| ^ Approximant | | l | ^ Approximant | | l | ||
| Line 95: | Line 94: | ||
| //Notes:// | //Notes:// | ||
| - | * /z/ and /v/ occur in 27–30% of the languages listed in PHOIBLE. But they are rarer than their voiceless equivalents /s/ and /f/, and a voicing contrast exists most typically in plosives, but not in fricatives, which include the sibilants (WALS 4). So, to avoid introducing such a voicing contrast, we don't admit these sounds as separate phonemes. /z/ is admitted as a variant pronunciation of its voiceless equivalent. /v/, on the other hand, is not considered an acceptable alternative | + | * /z/ and /v/ occur in 27–30% of the languages listed in PHOIBLE. But they are rarer than their voiceless equivalents /s/ and /f/, and a voicing contrast exists most typically in plosives, but not in fricatives, which include the sibilants (WALS 4). So, to avoid introducing such a voicing contrast, we don't admit these sounds as separate phonemes. /z/ is admitted as a variant pronunciation of its voiceless equivalent. |
| + | * /v/ could conceivably be considered an acceptable alternative | ||
| * All additional sounds occurring in at 18 percent of the world' | * All additional sounds occurring in at 18 percent of the world' | ||
| * As [[wp> | * As [[wp> | ||
| Line 101: | Line 101: | ||
| * /ʔ/ and /ɲ/ are kept optional to avoid difficult-to-distinguish " | * /ʔ/ and /ɲ/ are kept optional to avoid difficult-to-distinguish " | ||
| * The velar nasal /ŋ/ is considered an alternative pronunciation of /n/ in certain positions rather than an independent phoneme because only a minority of languages allow it at the start of syllables (WALS 9) and our rules for syllable structure – as explained below – don't allow it at the end of syllables either. Hence no position remains where it could occur as an independent phoneme. Instead we allow the alveolar or dental nasal /n/ to become velar before the velar plosives – a combination that is common in English, Hindi, Indonesian, Mandarin, and other languages. | * The velar nasal /ŋ/ is considered an alternative pronunciation of /n/ in certain positions rather than an independent phoneme because only a minority of languages allow it at the start of syllables (WALS 9) and our rules for syllable structure – as explained below – don't allow it at the end of syllables either. Hence no position remains where it could occur as an independent phoneme. Instead we allow the alveolar or dental nasal /n/ to become velar before the velar plosives – a combination that is common in English, Hindi, Indonesian, Mandarin, and other languages. | ||
| - | * Without requiring further changes, our consonant inventory corresponds to several other features analyzed as most typical by WALS. There are six plosives: /p, t, k, b, d, g/ \(WALS 5). The only lateral consonant is /l/ \(WALS 8). There are no uvular consonants and no glottalized consonants (WALS 6–7). There are no clicks, labial-velars, | + | * Without requiring further changes, our consonant inventory corresponds to several other features analyzed as most typical by WALS. There are six plosives: /p, t, k, b, d, g/ (WALS 5). The only lateral consonant is /l/ (WALS 8). There are no uvular consonants and no glottalized consonants (WALS 6–7). There are no clicks, labial-velars, |
| To avoid confusion between words that are pronounced, the core vocabulary | To avoid confusion between words that are pronounced, the core vocabulary | ||
| Line 117: | Line 117: | ||
| * /d̠ʒ/ is written **j** in English, Hausa, Indonesian, Javanese, and Swahili. No two other considered languages share the same common representation, | * /d̠ʒ/ is written **j** in English, Hausa, Indonesian, Javanese, and Swahili. No two other considered languages share the same common representation, | ||
| * /k/ is written **k** in German, Indonesian, Javanese, pinyin, Swahili, and Turkish. In English and Vietnamese, it is usually **c** or **k**, depending on context (the sound that follows); in French, Portuguese, and Spanish it is usually **c** or **qu**, depending on context. **c** might be considered an alternative, | * /k/ is written **k** in German, Indonesian, Javanese, pinyin, Swahili, and Turkish. In English and Vietnamese, it is usually **c** or **k**, depending on context (the sound that follows); in French, Portuguese, and Spanish it is usually **c** or **qu**, depending on context. **c** might be considered an alternative, | ||
| + | * /w/ is written **w** in English, Hausa, Indonesian, Javanese, and Swahili; **w** or **u** (after initials) in pinyin; **u** in Portuguese and Spanish (typically after /k/ or /g/ or in diphthongs); | ||
| * /ʃ/ is written as **sh** in English, Hausa, and Swahili; as **ch** in French; as **ch** or **x** in Portuguese. **x** is also used in several other Romance languages. Standard Chinese doesn' | * /ʃ/ is written as **sh** in English, Hausa, and Swahili; as **ch** in French; as **ch** or **x** in Portuguese. **x** is also used in several other Romance languages. Standard Chinese doesn' | ||
| * /j/ is **y** in English, Hausa, Indonesian, Javanese, Swahili, Turkish, and occasionally also in French, Portuguese, Spanish, and Vietnamese. No two other considered languages share the same common representation, | * /j/ is **y** in English, Hausa, Indonesian, Javanese, Swahili, Turkish, and occasionally also in French, Portuguese, Spanish, and Vietnamese. No two other considered languages share the same common representation, | ||
| Line 124: | Line 125: | ||
| According to WALS the most typical and median syllable structure among the world' | According to WALS the most typical and median syllable structure among the world' | ||
| - | The form //CCV(C)// is also allowed, but only if the second consonant is a liquid (**l** or **r**) or a semivowel (**w** or **y**). Lugamun' | + | The form //CCV(C)// is also allowed, but only if the second consonant is a liquid (**l** or **r**) or a semivowel (**v** or **y**). Lugamun' |
| * **bl, fl, gl, kl, pl, sl** | * **bl, fl, gl, kl, pl, sl** | ||
| * **br, dr, fr, gr, kr, pr, tr** | * **br, dr, fr, gr, kr, pr, tr** | ||
| + | * **cv, dv, gv, hv, kv, sv, tv, xv** | ||
| * **by, cy, fy, ky, my, ny, py, xy** | * **by, cy, fy, ky, my, ny, py, xy** | ||
| - | * **cw, dw, gw, hw, kw, sw, tw, xw** | ||
| - | Note that **w** and **y** can be considered as consonantal equivalents of the vowels **u** and **i**. If you don't know how to pronounce them or have difficulties pronouncing them in any of these clusters, just pronounce the vowel quickly and without stress, followed by the actual vowel which forms the core of the syllable. | + | Note that **v** and **y** can be considered as consonantal equivalents of the vowels **u** and **i**. If you don't know how to pronounce them or have difficulties pronouncing them in any of these clusters, just pronounce the vowel quickly and without stress, followed by the actual vowel which forms the core of the syllable. |
| All syllables end in either a vowel or one of the consonants **l, m, n, r, s, t**. Sequences or two or more consonants don't occur at the end of syllables. If you find it difficult to pronounce any of the allowed consonants in a syllable-final position or to pronounce a cluster of three consonants that might result if a syllable ending in a consonant is followed by one that starts with two, you might add an unstressed neutral vowel (the so-called schwa /ə/, as at the start of ' | All syllables end in either a vowel or one of the consonants **l, m, n, r, s, t**. Sequences or two or more consonants don't occur at the end of syllables. If you find it difficult to pronounce any of the allowed consonants in a syllable-final position or to pronounce a cluster of three consonants that might result if a syllable ending in a consonant is followed by one that starts with two, you might add an unstressed neutral vowel (the so-called schwa /ə/, as at the start of ' | ||
| - | Though they would be allowed by the rules listed above, the consonant combinations **ry, sy, ty** are avoided in Lugamun. Instead the semivowel is replaced by the corresponding vowel **i** in such cases (**ri, si, ti**), for example in **nasion** ' | + | Though they would be allowed by the rules listed above, the consonant combinations **ry, sy, ty** are avoided in Lugamun. Instead the semivowel is replaced by the corresponding vowel **i** in such cases (**ri, si, ti**), for example in **nasion** ' |
| - | //Notes:// | + | Within roots, a diphthong is never immediately followed by another vowel; in cases where this might be an option, the second part of the diphthong is instead replaced with the corresponding semivowel. For example, the Arabic numeral أَوَّل (ʾawwal) is adapted as **aval** |
| + | |||
| + | //Rationale:// | ||
| - | * The rule for syllable-final | + | * The specific set of consonants |
| * There is only one consonant allowed in two or more non-Indo-European source languages that fails the "half of all our source languages" | * There is only one consonant allowed in two or more non-Indo-European source languages that fails the "half of all our source languages" | ||
| - | * The consonant pairs allowed to start syllables are those that occur in this position (more frequently than as rare exceptions) in at least five of our ten source languages. Moreover, consonant pairs that occur in this position in Mandarin Chinese are also allowed even if they only occur in two or three other source languages. This adds adds six clusters ending in one of the semivowels **-w** and **-y** that would otherwise not be allowed (**cw, cy, hw, tw, xw, xy**). The reason for these additional admissions is that such consonant–semivowel pairs are very widespread in the Chinese vocabulary, where each core concept tends to be represented by a single syllable. Changing the semivowel to a vowel in such cases (hence dividing the single syllable into two) would make words of Chinese origin much less recognizable. | + | * The consonant pairs allowed to start syllables are those that occur in this position (more frequently than as rare exceptions) in at least five of our ten source languages. Moreover, consonant pairs that occur in this position in Mandarin Chinese are also allowed even if they only occur in two or three other source languages. This adds adds six clusters ending in one of the semivowels **-v** and **-y** that would otherwise not be allowed (**cv, cy, hv, tv, xv, xy**). The reason for these additional admissions is that such consonant–semivowel pairs are very widespread in the Chinese vocabulary, where each core concept tends to be represented by a single syllable. Changing the semivowel to a vowel in such cases (hence dividing the single syllable into two) would make words of Chinese origin much less recognizable. |
| * Two additional pairs that would fulfill the above criteria have, however, been excluded: **dy** because in rapid speech it can sound quit similar to **j**, and **ty** because it can sound similar to **c**. For the same reason, **ty** is also avoided between vowels, where it could otherwise still occur (since **t** is allowed to end a syllable). Likewise, **sy** is avoided between vowels because in rapid speech it can sound quit similar to **x**. The combination **ry** is avoided since it could be quite hard to pronounce, especially if one speaks the **r** as an approximant, | * Two additional pairs that would fulfill the above criteria have, however, been excluded: **dy** because in rapid speech it can sound quit similar to **j**, and **ty** because it can sound similar to **c**. For the same reason, **ty** is also avoided between vowels, where it could otherwise still occur (since **t** is allowed to end a syllable). Likewise, **sy** is avoided between vowels because in rapid speech it can sound quit similar to **x**. The combination **ry** is avoided since it could be quite hard to pronounce, especially if one speaks the **r** as an approximant, | ||
en/grammar/phonology_and_spelling.1668710350.txt.gz · Last modified: by christian
