The phonetics and phonology of lenition: A Campidanese Sardinian case study

This paper gives a detailed description of the consonant system of Campidanese Sardinian and makes methodological and theoretical contributions to the study of lenition. The data are drawn from a corpus of field recordings, including roughly 400 utterances produced by 15 speakers from the Trexenta a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jonah Katz, Gianmarco Pitzanti
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Library of Humanities 2019-09-01
Series:Laboratory Phonology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.journal-labphon.org/articles/184
id doaj-d937d9d202fa4e57896fea0d6a5427b7
record_format Article
spelling doaj-d937d9d202fa4e57896fea0d6a5427b72021-10-02T06:37:28ZengOpen Library of HumanitiesLaboratory Phonology1868-63542019-09-0110110.5334/labphon.18488The phonetics and phonology of lenition: A Campidanese Sardinian case studyJonah Katz0Gianmarco Pitzanti1Department of World Languages, Literatures, and Linguistics, West Virginia University, Morgantown, WVUniversitá di Cagliari, SardegnaThis paper gives a detailed description of the consonant system of Campidanese Sardinian and makes methodological and theoretical contributions to the study of lenition. The data are drawn from a corpus of field recordings, including roughly 400 utterances produced by 15 speakers from the Trexenta and Western Campidanese areas. Campidanese has a complex lenition system that interacts with length, voicing, and manner contrasts. We show that the semi-automated lenition analysis presented in this journal by Ennever, Meakins, and Round can be fruitfully extended to our corpus, despite its much more heterogeneous set of materials in a genetically distant language. Intensity measurements from this method do not differ qualitatively from more traditional ones in their ability to detect lenition-fortition patterns, but do differ in interactions with stress. Lenition-fortition patterns reveal at least three levels of prosodic constituent in Campidanese, each of which is associated with medial lenition and initial fortition. Lenition affects all consonants and V-V transitions. It reduces duration, increases intensity, and probabilistically affects qualitative manner and voicing features in obstruents. Mediation analysis using regression modeling suggests that some intensity and most qualitative reflexes of lenition are explained by changes in duration, but not 'vice versa'.https://www.journal-labphon.org/articles/184lenitionfortitioninitial strengtheningprosodic phrasingintensitydurationconsonant mannerCampidaneseCampidanianSardinian
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jonah Katz
Gianmarco Pitzanti
spellingShingle Jonah Katz
Gianmarco Pitzanti
The phonetics and phonology of lenition: A Campidanese Sardinian case study
Laboratory Phonology
lenition
fortition
initial strengthening
prosodic phrasing
intensity
duration
consonant manner
Campidanese
Campidanian
Sardinian
author_facet Jonah Katz
Gianmarco Pitzanti
author_sort Jonah Katz
title The phonetics and phonology of lenition: A Campidanese Sardinian case study
title_short The phonetics and phonology of lenition: A Campidanese Sardinian case study
title_full The phonetics and phonology of lenition: A Campidanese Sardinian case study
title_fullStr The phonetics and phonology of lenition: A Campidanese Sardinian case study
title_full_unstemmed The phonetics and phonology of lenition: A Campidanese Sardinian case study
title_sort phonetics and phonology of lenition: a campidanese sardinian case study
publisher Open Library of Humanities
series Laboratory Phonology
issn 1868-6354
publishDate 2019-09-01
description This paper gives a detailed description of the consonant system of Campidanese Sardinian and makes methodological and theoretical contributions to the study of lenition. The data are drawn from a corpus of field recordings, including roughly 400 utterances produced by 15 speakers from the Trexenta and Western Campidanese areas. Campidanese has a complex lenition system that interacts with length, voicing, and manner contrasts. We show that the semi-automated lenition analysis presented in this journal by Ennever, Meakins, and Round can be fruitfully extended to our corpus, despite its much more heterogeneous set of materials in a genetically distant language. Intensity measurements from this method do not differ qualitatively from more traditional ones in their ability to detect lenition-fortition patterns, but do differ in interactions with stress. Lenition-fortition patterns reveal at least three levels of prosodic constituent in Campidanese, each of which is associated with medial lenition and initial fortition. Lenition affects all consonants and V-V transitions. It reduces duration, increases intensity, and probabilistically affects qualitative manner and voicing features in obstruents. Mediation analysis using regression modeling suggests that some intensity and most qualitative reflexes of lenition are explained by changes in duration, but not 'vice versa'.
topic lenition
fortition
initial strengthening
prosodic phrasing
intensity
duration
consonant manner
Campidanese
Campidanian
Sardinian
url https://www.journal-labphon.org/articles/184
work_keys_str_mv AT jonahkatz thephoneticsandphonologyoflenitionacampidanesesardiniancasestudy
AT gianmarcopitzanti thephoneticsandphonologyoflenitionacampidanesesardiniancasestudy
AT jonahkatz phoneticsandphonologyoflenitionacampidanesesardiniancasestudy
AT gianmarcopitzanti phoneticsandphonologyoflenitionacampidanesesardiniancasestudy
_version_ 1716857704578809856