Pre-stopped consonant

In linguistics, pre-stopping, also known as pre-occlusion or pre-plosion, is a phonological process involving the historical or allophonic insertion of a very short stop consonant before a sonorant, such as a short [d] before a nasal [n] or a lateral [l]. The resulting sounds ([ᵈn, ᵈl]) are called pre-stopped consonants, or sometimes pre-ploded or (in Celtic linguistics) pre-occluded consonants, although technically [n] may be considered an occlusive/stop without the pre-occlusion.

A pre-stopped consonant behaves phonologically as a single consonant. That is, like affricates and trilled affricates, the reasons for considering these sequences to be single consonants lies primarily in their behavior.[1] Phonetically they are similar or equivalent to stops with a nasal or lateral release.

Terminology

There are three terms for this phenomenon. The most common by far is prestopped/prestopping.[2][3] In descriptions of the languages of Southeast Asia, Australia, and the Pacific, preploded/preplosion is common,[4] though prestopped is also used.[5] In accounts of Celtic languages, preoccluded/preocclusion is used almost exclusively.[6][7] Technically, nasals are already occlusives, and are often considered stops; however, some prefer to restrict the term 'stop' for consonants in which there is complete cessation of airflow, so 'prenasalized stop' and 'prestopped nasal' are not necessarily tautologies.[8]

In European languages

In Manx, pre-occlusion occurs in stressed monosyllabic words (i.e. words one syllable long), and is also found in Cornish on certain stressed syllables. The inserted stop is homorganic with the sonorant, which means it has the same place of articulation. Long vowels are often shortened before pre-occluded sounds. In transcription, pre-occluding consonants in final position are typically written with a superscripted letter in Manx[9] and in Cornish.[10]

Examples in Manx include:[11][12]

  • /m/[ᵇm]: trome /t̪roːm/[t̪roᵇm] "heavy"
  • /l/[ᵈl]: shooyll /ʃuːl/[ʃuːᵈl] "walking"
  • /n/[ᵈn]: kione /kʲoːn/[kʲoᵈn] "head"
  • /nʲ/[ᵈnʲ]: ein /eːnʲ/[eːᵈnʲ] "birds"
  • /ŋ/[ᶢŋ]: lhong /luŋ/[luᶢŋ] "ship"

In Cornish, pre-occlusion mostly affects the reflexes of older geminate/fortis /m/, intrinsically geminated in Old Cornish, and /nn/ (or /N/ depending on preferred notation). It also arises in a few cases where the combination /n+j/ was apparently re-interpreted as /nnʲ/.

Examples in Cornish:

  • /m#/[ᵇm]: mabm [mæᵇm] "mother"
  • /VmV/[bm]: hebma [ˈhɛbmɐ] "this"
  • /nn#/[ᵈn]: pedn [pɛᵈn] "head"
  • /VnnV/[dn]: pednow [ˈpɛdnɔ(ʊ)] "heads"

In Faroese, pre-occlusion also occurs, as in kallar [ˈkatlaɹ] 'you call, he calls', seinna [ˈsaiːtna] 'latter'. A similar feature occurs in Icelandic, as in galli [ˈkatlɪ] ('error'); sæll [ˈsaitl̥], seinna [ˈseitna]; Spánn [ˈspautn̥].

In Australian languages

Pre-stopped nasals and laterals are found in some Australian Aboriginal languages, such as Kuyani (Adnyamathanha), Arabana, Wangkangurru, Diyari, Aranda (nasals only), and Martuthunira (laterals only).[13] Adnyamathanha, for example, has the pre-stopped nasals [bm, ɟɲ, n̪, dn, ɖɳ] and the pre-stopped laterals [ɟʎ, l̪, dl, ɖɭ], though these are all in allophonic variation with the simple nasals and laterals [m, ɲ, n̪, n, ɳ, ʎ, l̪, l, ɭ].

In Mon–Khmer languages

Pre-stopped nasals are also found in several branches of Austroasiatic, especially in the North Aslian languages and Shompen, where historical word-final nasals, *m *n *ŋ, have become pre-stopped, or even full voiced stops [b d ɡ].

In Austronesian languages

Hiw of Vanuatu is the only Austronesian language that has been reported to have a pre-stopped velar lateral approximant /ᶢʟ/.[14] Its phonological behavior clearly defines it as a prestopped lateral, rather than as a laterally released stop.[14]

Nemi of New Caledonia has consonants that have been described as postnasalized stops,[15] but could possibly be described as prestopped nasals.[16]

gollark: I could never get inertial navigation to work so it just uses GPS every 0.1 seconds.
gollark: Except sometimes it doesn't get a GPS ping back or something and breaks horribly.
gollark: Deviations of about a block.
gollark: Slightly jittery. Not perfectly. Maybe I should have said "quite well" and not "perfectly".
gollark: It turns out I actually just needed a PD controller and magic constants and it now works perfectly.

See also

References

  1. Ladefoged, Peter; Maddieson, Ian (1996). The Sounds of the World's Languages. Oxford: Blackwell. p. 128. ISBN 978-0-631-19815-4.
  2. Ladefoged, Peter; Maddieson, Ian (1996). The Sounds of the World's Languages. Oxford: Blackwell. ISBN 978-0-631-19815-4.
  3. Keith Brown, ed. (2005). Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics (2 ed.). Elsevier. ISBN 0-08-044299-4.
  4. Adelaar & Himmelmann (2005) The Austronesian languages of Asia and Madagascar
  5. Botma (2004) Phonological Aspects of Nasality
  6. Ball & Fife (2002) The Celtic Languages
  7. "Pre-occluded" is also used in Laver (1994) Principles of Phonetics
  8. Ladefoged, Peter; Maddieson, Ian (1996). The Sounds of the World's Languages. Oxford: Blackwell. p. 102. ISBN 978-0-631-19815-4.
  9. Williams, Nicholas. 1994. "An Mhanainnis", in Stair na Gaeilge: in ómós do Pádraig Ó Fiannachta. Maigh Nuad: Roinn na Sean-Ghaeilge, Colásite Phádraig. §X.4.10. ISBN 0-901519-90-1
  10. Williams, Nicholas. 2006. "Pre-occlusion in Cornish", in Writing on Revived Cornish. Cathair na Mart: Evertype. ISBN 978-1-904808-08-4
  11. Broderick, George (1984–86). A Handbook of Late Spoken Manx. Tübingen: Niemeyer. pp. 3:28–34. ISBN 3-484-42903-8. (vol. 1). ISBN 3-484-42904-6 (vol. 2)., ISBN 3-484-42905-4 (vol. 3). Retrieved 2009-03-05.
  12. Broderick, George (1993). "Manx". In M. J. Ball; J. Fife (eds.). The Celtic Languages. London: Routledge. pp. 228–85 [236]. ISBN 0-415-01035-7.
  13. Mielke 2008:135
  14. François (2010)
  15. Ozanne-Rivierre (1995:54).
  16. François (2010:403).

Bibliography

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