Re: Glottal Stops and word-initial vowels
From: | Steg Belsky <draqonfayir@...> |
Date: | Sunday, January 11, 2004, 18:06 |
On Sunday, January 11, 2004, at 08:37 AM, Roger Mills wrote:
> Daniel D. Hicken wrote:
>> Is it a given that word initial vowels cause humans to use a glottal
>> stop
>> such as in /?{p@l/ apple, or /?{lo/ French 'Allo' Or is it more
>> frequently found that there are not?
>
> From my limited experience: Germanic langs. yes, though not
> necessarily in
> English**; Romance langs. no (except for French hache aspirée just
> mentioned), they elide their vowels. Indonesian and most of its
> relatives
> yes, eliding vowels is a no-no. Hawaiian and some other Oceanic
> langs. have
> contrastive 0 vs ? initial, which IMO must be very hard to hear (the ?
> in those cases is < *k).
Rokbeigalmki has very limited constractive 0 vs /?/:
/?i/ = female prefix
/i/ = 'and'
-Stephen (Steg)
"challah is a twisted experience."