Iconicity correlated with vowel harmony in Korean ideophones

This paper aims to establish connections between the following phenomena pertaining to Korean ideophonic vowel harmony: A set of vowel patterns classified (phonologically) as ‘harmonic,’ ‘neutral,’ and ‘disharmonic’; a set of ideophones classified (semantically) as onomatopoeic vs. cross-modal; and...

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Main Author: Nahyun Kwon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Library of Humanities 2018-01-01
Series:Laboratory Phonology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.journal-labphon.org/articles/53
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spelling doaj-c0bb81efb6b249eb8a056489c1fc2ff32021-10-02T02:40:01ZengOpen Library of HumanitiesLaboratory Phonology1868-63541868-63542018-01-019110.5334/labphon.5353Iconicity correlated with vowel harmony in Korean ideophonesNahyun Kwon0Japan Society for the Promotion of Science/Nagoya UniversityThis paper aims to establish connections between the following phenomena pertaining to Korean ideophonic vowel harmony: A set of vowel patterns classified (phonologically) as ‘harmonic,’ ‘neutral,’ and ‘disharmonic’; a set of ideophones classified (semantically) as onomatopoeic vs. cross-modal; and a set of form-meaning mappings classified (semiotically) as higher vs. lower in iconicity. Onomatopoeic ideophones represent sounds in the external world by linguistic sounds. To do so effectively requires taking whatever phonological and phonotactic liberties are needed. This predicts that (a) onomatopoeic ideophones will show great diversity in harmony patterns and, in contrast, (b) cross-modal ideophones that capture sensory imagery by using more abstract iconic mappings (Dingemanse et al., 2016) will have more ‘room’ to conform to vowel harmony. To test these hypotheses, the distribution of harmony patterns in onomatopoeic vs. cross-modal ideophones was examined, using a written corpus of Korean ideophonic stems. The results supported the hypotheses by revealing that onomatopoeic ideophones are skewed toward a larger proportion of disharmonic forms compared to cross-modal ideophones.https://www.journal-labphon.org/articles/53Vowel harmonyideophoneslinguistic iconicityKoreanphonotactics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nahyun Kwon
spellingShingle Nahyun Kwon
Iconicity correlated with vowel harmony in Korean ideophones
Laboratory Phonology
Vowel harmony
ideophones
linguistic iconicity
Korean
phonotactics
author_facet Nahyun Kwon
author_sort Nahyun Kwon
title Iconicity correlated with vowel harmony in Korean ideophones
title_short Iconicity correlated with vowel harmony in Korean ideophones
title_full Iconicity correlated with vowel harmony in Korean ideophones
title_fullStr Iconicity correlated with vowel harmony in Korean ideophones
title_full_unstemmed Iconicity correlated with vowel harmony in Korean ideophones
title_sort iconicity correlated with vowel harmony in korean ideophones
publisher Open Library of Humanities
series Laboratory Phonology
issn 1868-6354
1868-6354
publishDate 2018-01-01
description This paper aims to establish connections between the following phenomena pertaining to Korean ideophonic vowel harmony: A set of vowel patterns classified (phonologically) as ‘harmonic,’ ‘neutral,’ and ‘disharmonic’; a set of ideophones classified (semantically) as onomatopoeic vs. cross-modal; and a set of form-meaning mappings classified (semiotically) as higher vs. lower in iconicity. Onomatopoeic ideophones represent sounds in the external world by linguistic sounds. To do so effectively requires taking whatever phonological and phonotactic liberties are needed. This predicts that (a) onomatopoeic ideophones will show great diversity in harmony patterns and, in contrast, (b) cross-modal ideophones that capture sensory imagery by using more abstract iconic mappings (Dingemanse et al., 2016) will have more ‘room’ to conform to vowel harmony. To test these hypotheses, the distribution of harmony patterns in onomatopoeic vs. cross-modal ideophones was examined, using a written corpus of Korean ideophonic stems. The results supported the hypotheses by revealing that onomatopoeic ideophones are skewed toward a larger proportion of disharmonic forms compared to cross-modal ideophones.
topic Vowel harmony
ideophones
linguistic iconicity
Korean
phonotactics
url https://www.journal-labphon.org/articles/53
work_keys_str_mv AT nahyunkwon iconicitycorrelatedwithvowelharmonyinkoreanideophones
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