Taalen Phonology: Difference between revisions

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=Phonology=
=Phonology=
==Consonants==
==Consonants==
Taalen's phonetic inventory is fairly simple, and should be familiar to any English speaker, with a few exceptions. The voiceless nasals, bilabial fricatives (as well as palatal and velar fricatives), and the lateral fricatives are likely familiar from languages such as Welsh, Japanese, and German. Note also the presence of syllabic resonants.


{| cellpadding="5" border=1
{| cellpadding="5" border=1
! || Bilabial || Labiodental || Dental || Alveolar || Postalveolar || Palatal || Velar || Glottal  
! || Bilabial || Dental || Alveolar || Postalveolar || Palatal || Velar || Glottal  
|- align="center"  
|- align="center"  
| '''Plosive''' || /p/ /b/ || || || /t/ /d/ || || || /k/ /g/ ||
| '''Stop''' || p || || || t || || || k ||
|- align="center"
|- align="center"
| '''Nasal''' || /m̥/ /m/ || || || /n̥/ /n/ || || || /ŋ̥/ /ŋ/ ||
| '''Nasal''' || m || || || n || || || ŋ ||
|- align="center"
|- align="center"
| '''Fricative''' || || /f/ /v/ || /θ/ /ð/ || /s/ || /ʃ/ || || /ɣ/ || /h/
| '''Tap''' || || || || ɾ || || || ||
|- align="center"
|- align="center"
| '''Approx.''' || || /w/ || || || || /j/ || ||
| '''Fricative''' || || || || s || ʃ || || || h
|- align="center"
|- align="center"
| '''Flap''' || || || || /ɹ̥//ɾ/ || || || ||
| '''Lat. Fric.''' || || || || ɬ || || || ||
|- align="center"
|- align="center"
| '''Lat. App.''' || || || || /l/ || || || ||
| '''Approximant''' || w || || || || || j || ||
|- align="center"
|- align="center"
| '''Lat. Fric.''' || || || || /ɬ/|| || || ||
| '''Lat. App.''' || || || || l || || || ||
|- align="center"
| '''Affricate''' || || tθ || ts || || || || ||
|- align="center"
| '''Lat. Aff.''' || || || || tɬ || || || ||
|}
|}
Taalen's phonetic inventory is fairly simple, and will be familiar to any English speaker, with a few exceptions. The voiceless nasals, bilabial fricatives (as well as palatal and velar fricatives), and the lateral fricatives are likely familiar from languages such as Welsh, Japanese, and German. Note also the presence of syllabic resonants.


The voiceless stops are usually aspirated; in narrow transcription, [pʰ tʰ kʰ].
The voiceless stops are usually aspirated; in narrow transcription, [pʰ tʰ kʰ].

Revision as of 22:06, 30 November 2008

Phonology

Consonants

Bilabial Dental Alveolar Postalveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Stop pʰ p tʰ t kʰ k
Nasal m n ŋ
Tap ɾ
Fricative s ʃ h
Lat. Fric. ɬ
Approximant w j
Lat. App. l
Affricate ts
Lat. Aff.


Taalen's phonetic inventory is fairly simple, and will be familiar to any English speaker, with a few exceptions. The voiceless nasals, bilabial fricatives (as well as palatal and velar fricatives), and the lateral fricatives are likely familiar from languages such as Welsh, Japanese, and German. Note also the presence of syllabic resonants.

The voiceless stops are usually aspirated; in narrow transcription, [pʰ tʰ kʰ].

Continuants (excluding voiceless nasals, liquids, voiced nasals, and fricatives) may be geminate (i.e. long), with onset in the coda of one syllable and release in the onset of the next.

Vowels

Basic description/intro will be here.

Front Central Back
Close /i/ /ɪ/ /ʊ/ /u/
Close-mid /e/ /ø/ /o/
Open-mid /ɛ/ /æ/ /ə/
Open /a/ /ɑ/

Some resonants may also be syllabic: /m̩/ /n̩/ /ɹ̩/ /l̩/ as in <bottom>, <button>, <butter>, and <bottle>.

Vowel length is not phonemic, though stressed vowels tend to be held longer, and unstressed vowels tend to be weakened.

Diphthongs

Taalen possesses seven diphthongs, all falling: /aɪ eɪ oɪ əɪ aʊ oʊ əʊ/.

Allophones

  • [ç] and [x] are allophonic variants of /h/, the former appearing only near a front vowel, and the latter before a consonant or finally.
  • /f/ appears as [ɸ], and /v/ as [β], in free variation.
  • [ɬ] and [ɮ] also appear in free variation.
  • [ʌ] alternates with /ə/ in stressed syllables.
  • [ɾ] surfaces as [ɹ̩] when syllabic.

Rare phonemes

A number of Taalen phonemes are rarer than other. Among the rarest consonants are the voiced dental and velar fricatives /ð/ and /ɣ/, the voiceless nasals /m̥ n̥ ŋ̥/, the unvoiced labiodental or bilabial fricative /f/, and the labial approximant /w/. Also rare are most medial clusters, though they tend to be more common than these other listed phonemes.

The syllabic resonants are fairly rare, except in final syllables.

The most common are the sonorants /m n ŋ s ʃ l ɬ/ and the rhotic /ɾ/.

Among the vowels, the lax vowels /ɪ ʊ æ ø/ are slightly less common.

Stress

Taalen words are regularly stressed on the penultimate syllable. The only exception is when an unvoiced plosive ([p t k]) appears non-initially, in which case that syllable is stressed.

Cadarina /ˌka.də.ˈɾi.nə/ : normal stress, with normal Taalen spelling
Catarina /kə.ˈtʰa.ɾi.nə/ : spelling closer to an English standard, with exceptional stress placement

Mutation

Taalen is rich in mutation, partly a result of its polysynthetic typology. There are three primary types of mutation, lenition, nasaliszation, and vocalization. None of the mutations are strictly grammatical in nature, instead resulting from the morphophonology. Because of the nature of some morphemes, it can be difficult to see this, as the surface realization of a particular marker might only be mutation in the majority of cases.

Lenition

Historically, lenition arose most often from sibilants or liquids + stops initially, intervocalically, and from geminate stops. It also arose in syllabic codae, but only affected stops. It creates fricatives from stops, nasals are unvoiced, and fricatives tend to be weakened to approximants.

Nasalization

Arising from nasal assimilation, nasalization mutates unvoiced stops into voiced stops, and voiced stops into nasals.

Vocalization

The most common and complex mutation, vocalization is the primary means by which medial clusters are simplified in Taalen. In addition to voiced consonants becoming vowels, unvoiced consonants usually cause other changes. Some vowels arise simply as a result of compensatory lengthening, which is not technically vocalization, but has been classed as such by the Elder grammarians. In a similar vein, some consonants do not vocalize, but aspirate or otherwise mutate eiether themselves of consecutive consonants or vowels, and these are classed as vocalization mutations as well.

The diphthong-rich vocabulary of Taalen owes much of it's existence to this mutation historically. Many of the non-voiced phonemes caused compensatory lengthening (noted as Long in the summary below), prior to the breaking of long vowels into diphthongs. Here is a characteristic example:

rag- 'to carry'

with

-de a resultative suffix

becomes

raede /ɾəɪ.dɛ/ : stative verb 'to be borne, carried'


Summary of Mutation

Phoneme Lenition Nasalization Vocalization
p ph or f b ...
t th d ...
c h g ...
b bh or v m u
d dh n i
g gh ñ Long
m mh u
n nh i
ñ ñh Long
mh m u + devoicing
nh n i + devoicing
ñh ñ Long + devoicing
f null v Long + aspiration
th h dh Long + aspiration
h null gh Long + aspiration
v u u
dh y i
gh Long Long
s sh Long + aspiration
sh h Long + aspiration
y hi ni i
r rh Long + aspiration
rh Long + aspiration
l lh Long + aspiration
lh Long + aspiration

Empty cells indicate that no change occurs.

Phonotactics

Syllabic onsets may consist of any consonant. In addition, the following clusters are permitted:

  • stop + glide: /pj bj tj dj kj gj/ (only word initially)
  • nasal + glide: /nj ŋj mw ŋw/ (*/nw mj/ are not allowed)
  • /sv lj/


Syllabic nuclei consist of a single vowel, diphthong, or syllabic resonant. Vowels cannot remain in hiatus (*/aɛ/) but instead become a diphthong or introduce a glide: */iə/ -> /ijə/. The lax vowels /ɪ ʊ æ ø/ cannot appear without a geminate coda (runn /ɾʊnː/ vs. run /ɾun/). The schwa /ə/ cannot appear alone as a vowel in a stressed syllable (the diphthongs /əɪ əʊ/ are allowed).


The coda of a syllable can only be a continuant (though the nasals, liquids, and sibilants are much more common than fricatives) or null. Immediately preceding an onset cluster, no coda is allowed. In compounding, codae often vocalize before a cluster: /tam/ + /bran/ -> /taʊbrən/ (with unstressed /a/ -> /ə/). Geminate consonants are limited to continuants.


Cross-syllable (i.e. medial) clusters are limited and rare.

  • nasal + homorganic voiced stop: /mb nd ŋg/
  • nasal + glide: /nj ŋj mw ŋw/
  • liquid + glide: /lj lw rj rw/
  • certain fricative + liquid clusters: /fɾ vɾ θɾ ðɾ ɣɾ θl ðl/
  • velar fricative + homorganic glide: /çj xw/ written <hi hu>
  • /h/ + voiceless stop: /hp ht hk/ written <hb hd hg>


Syllables are therefore ON, NC, or ONC, where O is onset, N is nucleus, and C is coda. Words tend to be 3 syllables or less.

Orthography

Phoneme p t k b d g f θ h ç x v ð ɣ
Romanization p t c b d g f th h v dh gh
Phoneme m n ŋ ŋ̥ s ʃ l ɬ ɾ,ɹ ɹ̥
Romanization m n ñ mh nh ñh s sh l lh r rh
Phoneme j w i ɪ ʊ u e ø o ɛ
Romanization y,i u i i+ u+ u e eu o e
Phoneme æ ə a ɑ əɪ əʊ
Romanization ea a,y a aa ai ei oe ae au ou ao

+ : must be followed by a geminate


The letter y is also used to mark syllabicity on the four resonants: yn = /n̩/, ym = /m̩/, yr = /ɹ̩/, and yl = /l̩/. It is also used to indicate /ə/, as can the simple vowels in unstressed syllables.


U before a vowel is /w/, which never occurs before a back vowel (o or u). In the case where composition brings u before such a vowel, it becomes v: -au + o- = -avo-.


Though vowels cannot remain in hiatus (two sequential vowels which do not indicate a diphthong), they do appear frequently with understood glides between. For example, ia represents two syllables, /i.jə/, and uan can be one or two syllables, /wan/ or /u.wən/. The two syllable reading is usually distinguished with y, making uan (/wan/) and uyn (u.wən or u.wn̩), exactly as the native script does. It can also be indicated in romanization with ', so that the two could be distinguished as uan and u'an. This latter method is a remnant of an older romanization.


The digraph ch does not appear, replaced in mutation by h. The phoneme /ŋ/ is always represented by ñ, even in a cluster: /ŋg/ ñg.


Because Taalen does not allow stops finally, stems or words ending in stops aspirate them, and mark them with ' to indicate their origins:

ragh /ˈɾaɣ/ 'mist' ragha /ˈɾa.ɣə/ 'mists'
rag'h /ˈɾaɣ/ 'he carries' ragen /ˈɾa.gɛn/ 'I carry'


A newer romanization is gaining ground, in which such distinctions are not written, and left to the reader to clarify. The use of the apostrophe therefore has acquired an antiquated, victorian feel to its use.


Geminate consonants (such as ll /lː/) are represented by doubling the letter. In the native writing system, a special symbol is used for this (as well as in aa). The geminate digraphs are represented by tth, ddh, ggh, ssh, llh, and rrh (ph and bh only appear as the result of mutation, and thus won't appear geminated).

Links

Taalen Ethnography
Taalen Morphology