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Re: Question about vowel harmono

From:Patrick Dunn <tb0pwd1@...>
Date:Thursday, May 3, 2001, 3:45
On Wed, 2 May 2001, Patrick Dunn wrote:

> On Wed, 2 May 2001, Frank George Valoczy wrote: > > > On Wed, 2 May 2001, Patrick Dunn wrote: > > > > > On Wed, 2 May 2001, Frank George Valoczy wrote: > > > > > > > generally vowel-harmonic languages consider /i/ and /e/ to be neutral > > > > sounds, excet Turkish which has a counterart to /i/. Also most of them > > > > have counterarts for each vowel, if you have [a] [o] [u] you will have [&] > > > > [2] [y] as well... > > > > > > /&/ is like the OE aesc, right? > > > What's /2/? > > > > > > > ipa o-slash > > unrounded o?
*grabs book on phonology* Oh. rounded e. So . . . i.y u e.oe o ae a That doesn't seem very balanced to me. Are there any other languages that use vowel harmony? What about a close/open distinction instead of a front/back, so i, u, y would be close o, a, and e would be open I'm not sure I understand why there have to be correspondances between one set of vowels and the other. If I have the word "isilyth" then the plural affix can be -il, but for "amon" it would have to be -al. That seems reasonable to me. (Or maybe -el -- it's more or less an aesthetic decision, seems to me; am I wrong?) What would be cool is a four way distinction, so words could be classfied elementally. --Pat --------------------------------------------------------------------- Living your life is a task so difficult, it has never been attempted before.

Replies

dirk elzinga <dirk.elzinga@...>
Frank George Valoczy <valoczy@...>
Raymond Brown <ray.brown@...>