Kalahá phonology: Difference between revisions

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[[Category:Conlangs]]
==Phonemes==
==Phonemes==



Revision as of 06:06, 28 October 2008


Phonemes

Consonants

Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Plosive p t k (?)
Nasal m n N
Fricative s h
Lateral l
Approximant (w) (j)

Romanisation of the consonants

Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Plosive p t k '
Nasal m n g
Fricative s h
Lateral l
Approximant u i


The phone [?] is not regarded as a phoneme by the imperial linguistic society. It enters first in words before a vowel, or breaks up disallowed vowel-clusters. In the romanisation [?] is written as <’> only between vowels.

The approximants [w] and [j] are regarded as allophones of the short vowels /u/ and /i/ by the kalahaic linguists.


Vowels

Front Central Back
High i u
Mid @
Low a

Romanisation of the vowels

Front Central Back
High i u
Mid e
Low a


/@/ is not regarded as a ”pure” vowel by the kalahaic linguists, but nevertheless as an phonemic vowel.

The ”pure” vowels can be long: /i:/ /u:/ /a:/ which are romanised <ii> <uu> <aa>


Stress

Stress in Kalahá is phonemic, and can fall on any syllable of a lexical root containing a "pure" vowel.

Stress is marked with a <´> on the stressed syllable in the romanisation.

If there are several lexical roots in a word, the primary stress falls on the last stressed syllable, while the other stressed syllables receive secondary stress.


Syllable structure

Syllabic representation

Syllable structure is C(G)V(V)(X), where:

C is any consonant, including [?] but excluding the approximants
G is a glide, i.e. one of the two approximants
V is any vowel
VV is a long vowel, or an allowed diphthong
X is any consonant, excluding [?] and the approximants, and with the nasal phonemes neutralising their contrast (to /n/ lets say)

G is not allowed before /@/. Also /j/ is not allowed before /i/ and /w/ is not allowed before /u/.


The allowed diphthongs are:

/ai/ [aI)]
/au/ [aU)]


Imperial moraic representation

The kalahans describes the syllable structure differently, which reminds of a moraic system.

They describe 3 different types of morae:

The opening empty mora: C-
The opening full mora: (C)V-
The closing mora: -VC


Long vowels and diphthongs are described as the vowels belonging to different morae:

ta ta op.fu.
taa ta+a op.fu.+op.fu.
taat ta+at op.fu.+cl.
tat t+at op.em.+cl.
tjat ti+at op.fu.+cl.
tjaat ti+a+at op.fu.+op.fu.+cl.