Phonological Assimilation in Urban Jordanian Arabic

This study reports patterns of phonological assimilation in consonant clusters in Urban Jordanian Arabic (UJA). We examine all possible C1C2 combinations across a word boundary as well as the concatenations of consonant-final prefixes //in/ and //il/ and consonant-initial stems. The data show that p...

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Main Authors: Zuraiq, Wael, Zhang, Jie
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Kansas, Department of Linguistics 2006-01-01
Series:Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1808/1229
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spelling doaj-010140253f6645d78b3207db5f6946472020-11-25T01:01:26ZengUniversity of Kansas, Department of LinguisticsKansas Working Papers in Linguistics2378-76002006-01-0128648910.17161/KWPL.1808.1229Phonological Assimilation in Urban Jordanian Arabic Zuraiq, WaelZhang, JieThis study reports patterns of phonological assimilation in consonant clusters in Urban Jordanian Arabic (UJA). We examine all possible C1C2 combinations across a word boundary as well as the concatenations of consonant-final prefixes //in/ and //il/ and consonant-initial stems. The data show that place assimilation in UJA is regressive, and it can occur both across major articulators and within the same articulator (for coronals). UJA also exhibits voicing assimilation and emphasis assimilation. The main theoretical interest of the work lies in the observation that phonological assimilation in UJA is sometimes conditioned by the similarity between the two adjacent consonants. This is reflected in three patterns of assimilation. First, coronal consonants with a minor place difference (e.g., alveolar vs. palatoalveolar) may assimilate to each other only if the sonorancy of the consonants already matches. Second, coronal obstruents may undergo place assimilation when followed by a coronal obstruent, but not a velar obstruent. Third, voicing and emphasis assimilations occur only if the places of the adjacent consonants are identical underlyingly or as a result of place assimilation. These results are discussed briefly in the light of recent works by MacEachern (1999), Hansson (2001), Zuraw (2002), Rose and Walker (2004), and Steriade (to appear). The UJA place assimilation patterns are also compared to the implicational hierarchies established by Mohanan (1993)’s and Jun (1995)’s crosslinguistic typologies. http://hdl.handle.net/1808/1229
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zuraiq, Wael
Zhang, Jie
spellingShingle Zuraiq, Wael
Zhang, Jie
Phonological Assimilation in Urban Jordanian Arabic
Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics
author_facet Zuraiq, Wael
Zhang, Jie
author_sort Zuraiq, Wael
title Phonological Assimilation in Urban Jordanian Arabic
title_short Phonological Assimilation in Urban Jordanian Arabic
title_full Phonological Assimilation in Urban Jordanian Arabic
title_fullStr Phonological Assimilation in Urban Jordanian Arabic
title_full_unstemmed Phonological Assimilation in Urban Jordanian Arabic
title_sort phonological assimilation in urban jordanian arabic
publisher University of Kansas, Department of Linguistics
series Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics
issn 2378-7600
publishDate 2006-01-01
description This study reports patterns of phonological assimilation in consonant clusters in Urban Jordanian Arabic (UJA). We examine all possible C1C2 combinations across a word boundary as well as the concatenations of consonant-final prefixes //in/ and //il/ and consonant-initial stems. The data show that place assimilation in UJA is regressive, and it can occur both across major articulators and within the same articulator (for coronals). UJA also exhibits voicing assimilation and emphasis assimilation. The main theoretical interest of the work lies in the observation that phonological assimilation in UJA is sometimes conditioned by the similarity between the two adjacent consonants. This is reflected in three patterns of assimilation. First, coronal consonants with a minor place difference (e.g., alveolar vs. palatoalveolar) may assimilate to each other only if the sonorancy of the consonants already matches. Second, coronal obstruents may undergo place assimilation when followed by a coronal obstruent, but not a velar obstruent. Third, voicing and emphasis assimilations occur only if the places of the adjacent consonants are identical underlyingly or as a result of place assimilation. These results are discussed briefly in the light of recent works by MacEachern (1999), Hansson (2001), Zuraw (2002), Rose and Walker (2004), and Steriade (to appear). The UJA place assimilation patterns are also compared to the implicational hierarchies established by Mohanan (1993)’s and Jun (1995)’s crosslinguistic typologies.
url http://hdl.handle.net/1808/1229
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AT zhangjie phonologicalassimilationinurbanjordanianarabic
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