Thoughts on the phonological interpretation of {nasal,oral} contour consonants in some indigenous languages of South-America

<p>An intriguing feature of the Americas as a linguistic area is the frequent occurrence of oral/nasal contour consonants. In this paper we will study a number of languages that have these sounds and discuss the explanations based on the enhancement of phonological contrast that should...

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Main Author: William Leo Wetzels
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidade Estadual Paulista Júlio de Mesquita Filho 2008-07-01
Series:Alfa: Revista de Lingüística
Subjects:
Online Access:http://seer.fclar.unesp.br/alfa/article/view/1500
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spelling doaj-245c8ee3fdee406fb9f00037a4e50b6e2020-11-25T00:13:29ZengUniversidade Estadual Paulista Júlio de Mesquita FilhoAlfa: Revista de Lingüística0002-52161981-57942008-07-01522Thoughts on the phonological interpretation of {nasal,oral} contour consonants in some indigenous languages of South-AmericaWilliam Leo Wetzels<p>An intriguing feature of the Americas as a linguistic area is the frequent occurrence of oral/nasal contour consonants. In this paper we will study a number of languages that have these sounds and discuss the explanations based on the enhancement of phonological contrast that should account for their occurrence. One of these explanations considers the nasal phase of a contour consonant as the enhancement of an underlying voice contrast; the other explanation regards the oral phase realized on an underlying nasal consonant as a strategy to maintain a neat oral/nasal contrast on vowels. In this way the different enhancement-based theories presuppose different underlying segments from which the contour sounds are derived. In some cases, the synchronic source of the contour segments seems undisputed, either because the language is lacking the contrast that is to be enhanced, or because it uses the secondary (enhancement) feature contrastively. The phonological interpretation of contour sounds becomes more diffi cult in the numerous languages that have both a nasal/oral contrast on vowels and lack a phonemic opposition between voiceless /P/, voiced /B/ and nasal /N/. In these languages the view of enhancement as a feature of phonetic implementation is dubious. Rather, the enhancing feature seems to play a role in the choice of underlyingly contrastive segments.</p>http://seer.fclar.unesp.br/alfa/article/view/1500Contour consonantsEnhancementAmerindian languages
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author William Leo Wetzels
spellingShingle William Leo Wetzels
Thoughts on the phonological interpretation of {nasal,oral} contour consonants in some indigenous languages of South-America
Alfa: Revista de Lingüística
Contour consonants
Enhancement
Amerindian languages
author_facet William Leo Wetzels
author_sort William Leo Wetzels
title Thoughts on the phonological interpretation of {nasal,oral} contour consonants in some indigenous languages of South-America
title_short Thoughts on the phonological interpretation of {nasal,oral} contour consonants in some indigenous languages of South-America
title_full Thoughts on the phonological interpretation of {nasal,oral} contour consonants in some indigenous languages of South-America
title_fullStr Thoughts on the phonological interpretation of {nasal,oral} contour consonants in some indigenous languages of South-America
title_full_unstemmed Thoughts on the phonological interpretation of {nasal,oral} contour consonants in some indigenous languages of South-America
title_sort thoughts on the phonological interpretation of {nasal,oral} contour consonants in some indigenous languages of south-america
publisher Universidade Estadual Paulista Júlio de Mesquita Filho
series Alfa: Revista de Lingüística
issn 0002-5216
1981-5794
publishDate 2008-07-01
description <p>An intriguing feature of the Americas as a linguistic area is the frequent occurrence of oral/nasal contour consonants. In this paper we will study a number of languages that have these sounds and discuss the explanations based on the enhancement of phonological contrast that should account for their occurrence. One of these explanations considers the nasal phase of a contour consonant as the enhancement of an underlying voice contrast; the other explanation regards the oral phase realized on an underlying nasal consonant as a strategy to maintain a neat oral/nasal contrast on vowels. In this way the different enhancement-based theories presuppose different underlying segments from which the contour sounds are derived. In some cases, the synchronic source of the contour segments seems undisputed, either because the language is lacking the contrast that is to be enhanced, or because it uses the secondary (enhancement) feature contrastively. The phonological interpretation of contour sounds becomes more diffi cult in the numerous languages that have both a nasal/oral contrast on vowels and lack a phonemic opposition between voiceless /P/, voiced /B/ and nasal /N/. In these languages the view of enhancement as a feature of phonetic implementation is dubious. Rather, the enhancing feature seems to play a role in the choice of underlyingly contrastive segments.</p>
topic Contour consonants
Enhancement
Amerindian languages
url http://seer.fclar.unesp.br/alfa/article/view/1500
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