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Re: Betreft: Re: Jaars IPA Helper

From:Herman Miller <hmiller@...>
Date:Friday, January 14, 2000, 4:17
On Thu, 13 Jan 2000 14:08:33 +0100, Rob Nierse <rnierse@...> wrote:

>BTW, is anyone familiar with Lakhota? I have a book that states that >Lakhota uses five (!) states of the glottis: >plain, ejective, aspirated, voiced and unvoiced. >Is that true? Are there more languages that have so many >distinctions? Or more?
I have an old book printed by the United States Indian Service, "Singing Sioux Cowboy", with text in both Lakota and English. It includes a brief description of the alphabet used in the book, which distinguishes between plain, aspirated, and ejective stops. There are also two voiced stops, b and g, but I can't find anything that might be described as "unvoiced" contrasting with the other four. The fricatives, by the way, can be voiced, voiceless, or ejective! Here's a summary: stops fricatives vowels voiced b g z j g a e i o u voiceless p t c k s ^s ^h h aN iN uN aspirated p` t` c` k` ejective p' t' c' k' s' ^s' ^h' laterals l nasals m n approximants w y -- languages of Kolagia---> +---<http://www.io.com/~hmiller/languages.html>--- Thryomanes /"If all Printers were determin'd not to print any (Herman Miller) / thing till they were sure it would offend no body, moc.oi @ rellimh <-/ there would be very little printed." -Ben Franklin