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Re: Pronouncing Tokana (was RE: Importance of stress)

From:Matt Pearson <jmpearson@...>
Date:Thursday, January 27, 2000, 23:06
I wrote:

>> "Tokana" is pronounced with >> stress on the penultimate syllable. The /t/ and /k/ are both unaspirated, >> and thus often sound voiced to an English speaker's ear (e.g. my boyfriend >> imitates my pronunciation by calling it "Dogana"). As for the vowels, >> the /o/ is a short back rounded lax mid-vowel, similar to the "au" in >> "caught" (for those speakers who distinguish "caught" from "cot"), or >> else like the "o" in "sort". The /a/ is as in "father". There is >> no appreciable difference in length or quality between the stressed >> /a/ in the second syllable and the unstressed /a/ in the final syllable.
And Paul Bennett replied:
>Okeydokey, that means I'll now pronounce it: > >/t_dQ<M>"kA<ML>.nA<L>/ > >Which is a heck of a lot easier to read, don't you think! I automatically >give it a fairly dental (/_d/) "t", ISTR something about this from your >webpage? > >If not, then that's the way it feels most natural to me. The /n/ is backed >from dental to alveolar thanks to the preceeding /k/. Heck, don't ask me >why, it's almost entirely instinctival...
I suppose I would pronounce it as follows: /tQ<M>"kA<H>.nA<L>/ Tokana "t" is actually pretty alveolar. Some speakers even retract it in certain contexts, giving an almost retroflex articulation - probably to maximise the phonetic contrast between "t" (the apico-alveolar stop) and "th" (the lamino-dental stop). Also, stress in Tokana seems to manifest itself phonetically as high tone, which drops to a low tone on the following vowel. (If the stress falls on a diphthong, then that diphthong is associated with a sharply falling contour tone.) Barring those quibbles, your pronunciation is dead on. Matt.