Hiatus (linguistics)
In phonology, hiatus (/haɪˈeɪtəs/; from Latin hiatus, meaning 'gaping'[1]), diaeresis (/daɪˈɛrɪsɪs/ or /daɪˈɪərɪsɪs/;[2], or dieresis (American English), from Ancient Greek διαίρεσις [diaíresis] "division"[3]) is the result of two vowel sounds occurring in adjacent syllables, with no intervening consonant. When two adjacent vowel sounds occur in the same syllable, the result is instead a synaeresis.
Sound change and alternation |
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Fortition |
Dissimilation |
The English words hiatus and diaeresis themselves each contain a hiatus between the first and second syllables.
Preference
Some languages do not have diphthongs, except sometimes in rapid speech, or they have a limited number of diphthongs but also numerous vowel sequences that cannot form diphthongs and so appear in hiatus. That is the case of Japanese, Bantu languages like Swahili, Lakota, and Polynesian languages like Hawaiian and Māori. Examples are Japanese aoi (あおい) 'blue/green', Swahili eua 'to purify', and Hawaiian aea 'to rise up', all of which are three syllables.
Avoidance
Many languages disallow or restrict hiatus and avoid it by deleting or assimilating the vowel or by adding an extra consonant.
Epenthesis
A consonant may be added between vowels (epenthesis) to prevent hiatus. That is most often a semivowel or a glottal, but all kinds of other consonants can be used as well, depending on the language and the quality of the two adjacent vowels. For example, some non-rhotic dialects of English often insert /r/ to avoid hiatus after non-high word-final or occasionally morpheme-final vowels.[4]
Contraction
In Greek and Latin poetry, hiatus is generally avoided although it occurs in many authors under certain rules, with varying degrees of poetic licence. Hiatus may be avoided by elision of a final vowel, occasionally prodelision (elision of initial vowel) and synizesis (pronunciation of two vowels as one without a change in spelling).
Marking
Diaeresis
In Dutch and French, the second of two vowels in hiatus is marked with a diaeresis (or tréma). That usage is occasionally seen in English (such as coöperate, daïs and reëlect) but has never been common, and over the last century, its use in such words has been dropped or replaced by the use of a hyphen except in a very few publications, notably The New Yorker.[5][6] It is, however, still common in loanwords such as naïve and Noël and in the proper names Zoë and Chloë.
Other ways
In German, hiatus between monophthongs is usually written with an intervening h, as in ziehen [ˈtsiː.ən] "to pull"; drohen [ˈdʁoː.ən] "to threaten". In a few words (such as ziehen), the h represents a consonant that has become silent, but in most cases, it was added later simply to indicate the end of the stem.
Similarly, in Scottish Gaelic, hiatus is written by a number of digraphs: bh, dh, gh, mh, th. Some examples include abhainn [ˈa.ɪɲ] "river"; latha [ˈl̪ˠa.ə] "day"; cumha [ˈkʰũ.ə] "condition". The convention goes back to the Old Irish scribal tradition, but it is more consistently applied in Scottish Gaelic: lathe (> latha). However, hiatus in Old Irish was usually simply implied in certain vowel digraphs óe (> adha), ua (> ogha).
Correption
Correption is the shortening of a long vowel before a short vowel in hiatus.
See also
- Diphthong
- Synaeresis
- Elision
- Vowel cluster
- Words without consonants – extreme examples of hiatus
- Movable nu
References
- hiātus. Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short. A Latin Dictionary on Perseus Project.
- "diaeresis". Oxford English Dictionary (3rd ed.). Oxford University Press. September 2005. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- διαίρεσις. Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; A Greek–English Lexicon at the Perseus Project
- "Voice and Speech in the Theatre"
- diaeresis: December 9, 1998. The Mavens' Word of the Day. Random House.
- Umlauts in English?. General Questions. Straight Dope Message Board.