Re: Question about T and D
From: | David J. Peterson <dedalvs@...> |
Date: | Tuesday, September 20, 2005, 22:52 |
Ph. D. wrote:
<<
Phonology is not my strong suit. I want to include [T] and [D]
in my conlang. Can someone suggest what sounds might
develop into [T] and [D] (and under what conditions) in a
languages which does not have those sounds? I'm looking
for something plausible here.
>>
Oh, plausible? I was going to suggest that [T] comes from *b
and [D] comes from *stroskoftopli, but if you want plausible,
I suppose the obvious would be [T] comes from *t_h and [D]
also possibly from *d_h (or intervocalic instances of /T/, which
can then appear on word boundaries due to final or initial
vowel deletion). Moro, the language we were studying, had /D/
as a phoneme with a voiceless allophone [T] in word-final
position. It might arise from, for example, a dental stop. Moro
has /b/ and /g/, but no /d/, so it's quite likely that the /d/
was dental, and that it spirantized over time. I suppose also
that /s/ and /z/ could move ever so slightly forward until
they became rather dental. How did Arabic get its /T/ and /D/?
-David
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