Theiling Online    Sitemap    Conlang Mailing List HQ   

Re: First post & three questions

From:jesse stephen bangs <jaspax@...>
Date:Saturday, January 20, 2001, 22:13
Roger Mills sikayal:

> Teoh and others have written: > > >On Fri, Jan 19, 2001 at 04:21:05PM -0700, dirk elzinga wrote: > >[snip] > >> > 1. What semivowels are there other than y and w? > >> > >> It seems to me that any high vowel may have a semivowel partner, > >> so just as /y/ is /i/'s semivowel partner and /w/ is /u/'s, you > >> can also have a high front rounded semivowel as a partner to /ü/ > >> (u-umlaut), and a high back unrounded semivowel as a partner to > >> /ï/ (i-diaresis). This is the so-called 'velar glide' of > >> Axininca Campa. > > > >Is it possible for other vowels to be semi-vowelized as well? 'cos my > >conlang has "smooth vowels": smooth /i/ --> [ji], smooth /u/ --> [wu]. > >How would this generalize to other vowels such as [a] or [e]? I pronounce > >a smooth /a/ almost like [Qa] (Q = velar fricative) except that it's a > >very weak [Q], almost non-velar-like. How would you classify something > >like this?>
Romanian has the semivocalized vowels /o/ and /e/ in the diphthongs /oa/ and /ea/. These are extremely common diphthongs in Romanian, but unfortunately, the distinctive status of semivowels [o] and [e] seems to be disappearing. Based on my experience in Romanian, there is no auditory difference between [w] and semi-[o] and the native speakers don't seem to distinguish them, and there is only minimal distinction between [j] and semi-[e]. Some speakers distinguish them, but others make them both [j]. Nonetheless, it seems that the distinction was there at one time. Jesse S. Bangs jaspax@u.washington.edu "It is of the new things that men tire--of fashions and proposals and improvements and change. It is the old things that startle and intoxicate. It is the old things that are young." -G.K. Chesterton _The Napoleon of Notting Hill_