Appendix:Munja'kin pronunciation

From The Languages of David J. Peterson
Jump to navigation Jump to search
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.
Munja'kin Language Navigation: Home, Phonology, Grammar, Vocabulary, Dialogue

The Munja'kin language has 17 consonants and 4 vowels.

Standard Romanization

Letter IPA English example Notes
a a father
b b bog
ch chop Always unaspirated
d d dog
g g good
h h ham
i i beet
j jog
k k skill Always unaspirated
l l left Always alveolar
m m man
n n no [ŋ] before a velar consonant
o o coat
p p span Always unaspirated
r ɾ battle
s s see
t t stop Always unaspirated
u u rude
v v voice Allophone of /w/ before /u/ and /o/
w w wet
z z zoo
ʔ uh-oh

Phonetics

Consonants

Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal m /m/ n /n/ (n [ŋ])
Plosive voiceless p /p/ t /t/ ch /tʃ/ k /k/ ' /ʔ/
voiced b /b/ d /d/ j /dʒ/ g /g/
Fricative voiceless s /s/ h /h/
voiced (v [v]) z /z/
Approximant w /w/ l /l/
Tap r /ɾ/

Proto-Munja'kin also had a phonemic /ŋ/, but it merged with /n/. In modern Munja'kin, [ŋ] is merely an allophone of /n/ before velars.

/w/ and [v] are in complementary distribution, /w/ only appears before /i/ and /a/, whereas [v] only appears before /u/ and /o/. However, they are romanized as separate sounds. Both were /w/ in Proto-Munja'kin, but /w/ became [v] before rounded vowels, causing consonant alternations.

Vowels

Munja'kin has only 4 phonetically distinct vowels:

Front Central Back
Close i /i/ u /u/
Mid o /o/
Open a /a/

Proto-Munja'kin also had /e/, but it merged with /i/ when stressed and with /a/ when unstressed. Proto-Munja'kin /o/ became /u/ after /ŋ/ and /g/ or before a syllable-final /ŋ/. These changes all cause vowel alternations.

Phonotactics

Native Munja'kin words use (C)(C)V(C) syllables. A syllable's onset may be any consonant or a sibilant (/s/ or /z/) followed by /p/, /t/, /tʃ/, /k/, /b/, /d/, /dʒ/ or /g/. Null onsets are also allowed and contrast with glottal stops. Vowel sequences are allowed, the same vowel may even appear twice in a row.

A syllable's coda may be /n/ (which becomes /m/ before a labial and [ŋ] before a velar), /s/ (which becomes /z/ before a voiced consonant), or /ʔ/ before /p/, /t/, /tʃ/ or /k/ (these consonant sequences are actually former geminates). In Proto-Munja'kin, a syllable could also end with /m/ or /ŋ/ word-medially, or /ŋ/ word-finally. Nasal codas still contrast before liquids, they merged everywhere else.

Voiceless consonants become voiced after nasal codas (some function words with a nasal coda even cause the following word's first consonant to voice). Epenthetic stops are added between nasals and continuants ([d] after /n/, [b] after /m/ and [g] after Proto-Munja'kin /ŋ/).

Stress

Native Munja'kin words are usually stressed on their penultimate syllable. Compound words are stressed on their first component's last syllable, but adding a suffix cancels this and causes their penult to be stressed instead. No matter where they appeared in a word, the Proto-Munja'kin vowel sequences /ai/ and /au/ became stressed /i/ and /u/, respectively. Any instance of non-penultimate stress is indicated by an acute accent in the romanization.