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Re: Hiksilipsi Consonant Phonology

From:wayne chevrier <wachevrier@...>
Date:Friday, September 7, 2001, 16:29
Jesse Bangs nevesht:
> >Hey, y'all. I've been working on this for a while, and I decided to come >out with what I have of the phonology for now. Any comments and/or >suggestions are welcome. > >Hiksilipsi contains three grades of phonemes: a radical grade, a y-grade, >and a w-grade. The y- and w- grade phonemes are formed by adding a y [j] >or w [w] glide to the radical phonemes, but there are several mutations >that occur when these grades are formed. To begin, the radical phonemes >are (written with the orthographic symbols, with the IPA next to it where >different. Thanks to YHL for giving me the idea to spell [?] as {q}): > > p t k q [?] > f [P] s h > ps ks > m n ñ [N] > mp ñk [Nk] > >The nasals and nasal occlusives do not participate in the mutation >scheme, so I'll leave them out of the next charts. > >When combined with the y-glide, the phonemes take the following forms. >Throughout this chart {y} represents [j]: > py ty [tç] qy [?j] > fy [Pj] sy hy [ç] > phy [pç] > >Thus, the most salient changes are /ty/ > [tç], /hy/ > [ç], and /psy/ > >[pç] > >The w-grade phonemes are: > tw kw qw [?w] > hw sw hw [w_0] > khw [kw_0] > >The only really important changes are /fw/ > [w_0], /hw/ > [w_0], and >/ksw/ > [kw_0]. > >You'll notice that there are no velars with y-glides or labials with >w-glides. This is because there is an active dissimilation in >Hiksilipsi: when /y/ is preceded by /k ks ñ ñk/ it becomes /w/ and >affects the preceding sound as /w/. Likewise, when /w/ is preceded by /p >ps m mp/ it becomes /y/ and affects the preceding consonant as /y/. The >only exception to this rule is /f/. Underlying /fw/ does exist, because >very early in the language there was a rule that changed [P] to [h] when >followed by a rounded sound. Thus, /fw/ merges with /hw/, as shown >above. > >There are a couple of odd things about this system. Everything's pretty >regular underlyingly, but the surface forms are really weird. There is >no plain [w], but there is a [w_0]. There are the clusters [?j] and >[?w], which I've never seen in a real language. Then /psy/ and /ksw/ >mutate to assimilate the /s/, but plain /sy/ and /sw/ are unchanged. > >Do these things seem reasonable to everyone? Or is it hopelessly weird? >
The clusters [?j] and [?w] are found in several languages of British Columbia, in particular initially in Haida [Xaai.da] e.g. <wansuuga> the classical Haida quotative [?wan.su:.ga] sothat is perfectly reasonable but I would suspect [w_0] would become [f] -Wayne Chevrier p.s. nevesht is Farsi he/she/it/they(inanimate) wrote _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp