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Re: Koryak Vowel harmony (was Re: DECAL: Examples #2: Phonotactics)

From:Isaac Penzev <isaacp@...>
Date:Thursday, January 20, 2005, 12:24
Hi,

Jörg Rhiemeier wrote:

> Ah, Chukotko-Kamchatkan vowel harmony!
First of all, I beg your pardon for messing the things up both in explanation and in examples. I should have always consulted the sources before posting.
> It's not all that evil, it's a "dominant-recessive" system. > One set of vowels, namely the low ones, is dominant above the other. > If *one* morpheme contains the low vowels, the vowels in *all* > morphemes get lowered. No matter if the morpheme with the low > vowels is the root or not! Only if all morphemes have underlying > high vowels, these actually surface as high vowels. At least, > that is how I understand what I have read about it.
Yes, I think your explanation makes sense. When I said "evil", I meant that I found such alterations in root morphemes rather unpleasant for my current project to be included in, for aesthetical reasons. As for "alterations", I merely quoted (or, bettersay, misquoted) the grammar sketch of Koryak by Dr. Zhukova I found on www.philology.ru (in Russian). Indeed, those are /e/, /a/ and /o/, that are "strong" ("low" in your terms), while /i/, */E/ and /u/ are "weak". We have a similar set of vowels in Ojibwee, don't we? Does it have the same type of vowel harmony? Dr. Zhukova gives the following examples (_y_ stands for [@], µ for [N] - translit is mine), morpheme boundaries hyphened: _nute-k_ 'in tundra' : _nota-µko_ 'from tundra'; _miml-e_ 'water.Instr' : _meml-etyµ_ 'to water'; _iw-i_ 'he said' : _ew-laj_ 'they said'; _titi-te_ 'needle.Instr' : _wala-ta_ 'knife.Instr'; _nyvyl-i_ 'he stopped.vi' : _vetat-e_ 'he worked'; _hig-u_ 'wolves' : _memyl-o_ 'seals'.
> Greenberg surely was a brilliant typologist, but his contributions > to historical linguistics are dubious.
Historical linguistics is always dubious ;)
> something Samuel Johnson would have called > "milking the bull"
Hehe. I like this phrase! -- Yitzik

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Henrik Theiling <theiling@...>