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LING 303 / 10F Phonology I vw

LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

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Page 1: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

LING 303 / 10F

Phonology I

vw

Page 2: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

Last class…

We finished [±lateral]

Positional constraints

*[+lateral].

*.[+lateral]

*[‒lateral].

Assimilation

As repair to *[+lateral]…[‒lateral]

Dissimilation

As repair to *[‒lateral]…[‒lateral]

Page 3: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

Today‟s agenda

New feature: [±strident]

New concept: assibilation

Page 4: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

Georgian

dan-uri ‘Danish’ asur-uli ‘Asyrrian’

somχ-uri ‘Armenian’ ungr-uli ‘Hungarian’

ʧerk’ez-uli ‘Cherkessian’

Page 5: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

[±strident]

The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise.

[–strident] phonemes are realised at lower pitch.

Because it is defined on the basis of air turbulence, [±strident] is important only for obstruents ([–sonorant]).

Clements (2001:111): “The feature [+strident] is realized phonetically in the turbulence noise associated with obstruents.”

Page 6: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

The most common [+strident]

phonemes are the fricatives /s, z, ʃ, ʒ/

and the affricates /ts, dz, tʃ, dʒ/, often

collectively referred to as sibilants.

Coronal stridency

Page 7: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

Labial stridency, e.g. Ewe

éɸá „he polished‟ éfá „he was cold‟

ɛβɛ „Ewe language‟ ɛvɛ „two‟

éɸlè „he bought‟ éfle „he split off‟

èβló „mushroom‟ évló „he is evil‟

Page 8: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

Ewe speaker

Dr. Ozouf Amedegnato

Assistant Prof in French Dept.

Teaches “Phonologie française”

regularly

FYI: LING students can count FREN

349 as a LING credit, if they like…

Page 9: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

German

[pf] [ts] [kᵡ]

German Pfuhl Zunge Kxuː (Swiss)

cf. English pool tongue cow

Page 10: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

Affricates

Tsuut‟ina (tsuutina.ca)

t vs. ʦ

d vs. ʣ

t‟ vs. ʦ‟

Language?

c vs. ʧ

ɟ vs. ʤ

Page 11: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

Basque

/ipin-/ „put‟ + /-ʦen/ „imperfect‟ [ipinʦen]

/ikas-/ „learn‟ + /-ʦen/ [ikasten]

/irabaz-/ „earn‟ + /-ʦen/ [irabazten]

Page 12: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

Basque

/ipin-/ „put‟ + /-ʦen/ „imperfect‟ [ipinʦen]

/ikas-/ „learn‟ + /-ʦen/ [ikasten]

/irabaz-/ „earn‟ + /-ʦen/ [irabazten]

LaCharité (1993:164): “When the

morphology juxtaposes two [+strident]

specifications, the rightmost is deleted,

leaving a homorganic stop”

Page 13: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

Yucatec Maya

Disallowed root shapes:

*sVʦ *ʦVs *ʃVs *ʧVs

*sVʃ *ʦVʃ *ʃVʦ *ʧVʦ

*sVʧ *ʦVʧ *ʃVʧ *ʧVʃ

etc.

Page 14: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

So far...

[±lateral]

[–later] [+later]

r l Spanish, etc.

t tɬ Oowekyala, etc

k kʟ Archi, etc.

[±strident]

[–strid] [+strid]

θ s English, etc.

ɸ f Purepecha, etc.

t ts Blackfoot, etc.

Page 15: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

So far...

[±lateral]

[–later] [+later]

r l Spanish, etc.

t t ɬ Oowekyala, etc

k kʟ Archi, etc.

[±strident]

[–strid] [+strid]

θ s English, etc.

ɸ f Purepecha, etc.

t t s Blackfoot, etc.

Page 16: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

Assimilation of [±strident]

Obvious cases of assimilation of

[±strident] are rare.

I‟ve only ever found one possible

case:

In Plains Cree “plain” /t/‟s become

[+strident] affricates [ʦ] when they

occur with a diminutive affix: -(i)s or

-(i)sis:

Page 17: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

Plains Cree

Non-diminutives Diminutives

astotin „a/the hat‟ astsotsin-is „a little hat‟

hat hat-dim

ni-nitohte-n „I listen‟ ni-nitsohtse-s-in „I listen a little‟

1-listen-1 1-listen- dim-1

atim „dog‟ atsimo-sis „a/the little dog‟

dog dog-dim

ni-tem „my horse‟ ni-tsem-isis „my little horse‟

1-horse 1-horse-dim

Page 18: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

Regressive assimilation of [+strident]

from the diminutive suffix?

An association line is added between

a [+strident] feature of the diminutive

suffix and any preceding /t/…

Page 19: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

Assibilation

A process in which a stop

becomes [+strident], usually

preceding a high vowel.

Page 20: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

Japanese

a. /tat-u/ [tatsu] ‘to stand’ + pres

/tat-i-mas-u/ [tatʃimasu] ‘to stand’ + polite + pres

b. /tat-e/ [tate] ‘to stand’ + imp

/tat-a-nai/ [tatanai] ‘to stand’ + neg

/tat-oo/ [tatoo] ‘to stand’ + cohort

/t/ is affricated to [ts] before the vowel [u], and to [tʃ]

before the vowel [i].

Page 21: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

Loans in Japanese

Japanese Original

a. tsuːpiːsu English: ‘two piece(s)’

b. tsuːruːzu French: ‘Toulouse’ (place name)

c. kutsuːruːtsu English: ‘cutlet’

Page 22: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

Acoustic explanation

Narrow channel which is created in the transition between a stop and a following high vowel generates an especially long turbulence, which speakers interpret as a [+strident] feature on the stop.

Page 23: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

Turbulence length

t a

t i, u

Page 24: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

Kim (2001)

“The generation of air turbulence in the

context of phonological assibilation is

phonologically interpreted as the

insertion of the feature [+strident] into

the feature complex characterising the

plosive in a plosive + high vocoid

sequence, with the deletion of the

previous feature [–strident], if present.”

(p. 102)

Page 25: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

Blackfoot

a. /nit-iːtsiniki/ [nitsiːtsiniki] ‘I related (a story)’

1-relate

/nit-a-iːtsiniki/ [nitεːtsiniki] ‘I am relating (a story)’

1-dur-relate

b. /kit-iːtsiniki/ [kitsiːtsiniki] ‘you related (a story)’

2-relate

/kit-a-iːtsiniki/ [kitεːtsiniki] ‘you are relating (a story)’

2-dur-relate

Page 26: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

/iːtsiniki-wa/ [iːtsinikiwa] ‘he related (a story)’

relate-3

/a-iːtsiniki-wa/ [εːtsinikiwa] ‘he is relating (a story)’

dur-relate-3

Page 27: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

Asheninca (Campa; Arawakan)

a. /no-kant-i/ [nokantsi] ‘I said’

I-say-nf (nonfuture)

b. /no-ant-i/ [nantsi] ‘I did’

I-do-nf (nonfuture)

c. /no-misi-i/ [nomisitsi] ‘I dreamed’

I-dream-nf (nonfuture)

Page 28: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

Canadian French (not Acadian)

a. aktsɪf ‘active’ i. tsy ‘you’

b. dzi ‘say’ j. twe ‘you’ (obj.)

c. tu ‘all’ (m.) k. deʒɑ ‘already’

d. dɔne ‘give’ l. dzʏk ‘duke’

e. admεt ‘admit’ m. dzɪsk ‘record’ (noun)

f. tɔtal ‘total’ n. dʊt ‘doubt’

g. tut ‘all’ (fem.) o. sɔrtsi ‘exit’

h. tsɪp ‘type’

Page 29: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

“Velar softening”

critic > criticism

electric > electricity

romantic > romanticism

medic(al) > medicine

public > publicist

etc.

Page 30: LING 303 / 10F - ucalgary.ca · [±strident] The feature [+strident] characterises phonemes that are realised with high frequency frication, that is, high pitch white noise

German