Pauses with or instead of Long Vowels
Pauses with or instead of Long Vowels
I was thinking about the concept of a musical rest and how musicians are encouraged to "play" it. I wondered whether that could be applied to language. Is there any precedent of a pause in a word with a similar beat to a long vowel? And I don't mean with gemination or glottal closure--simply just a lack of sound. You could compare it to a long voice-onset time (using zero as representative of the pause): /t0a/ (delayed VOT) vs. /ja0ta/ (post-vocalic pause). And if such a thing existed, post-vocalically, does or could it contrast with a long vowel, in which the entire length is taken up by voicing? E.g., /jata/ vs. /ja0ta/ vs. /ja:ta/.
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Re: Pauses with or instead of Long Vowels
I dont think that could happen in a human language. I dont really know *why*, but it just seems to me that it wouldnt survive. Im not sure that the /ta0na/ type would be distincguishable from a glottal stop anyway.
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Re: Pauses with or instead of Long Vowels
How is this different than aspiration/preaspiration or /h/?Αυτοβοτα wrote:You could compare it to a long voice-onset time (using zero as representative of the pause): /t0a/ (delayed VOT) vs. /ja0ta/ (post-vocalic pause).
Re: Pauses with or instead of Long Vowels
How do you tell what's a word and what's a group of words in this hypothetical language? If your answer is stress, is "the" a word in English?
Re: Pauses with or instead of Long Vowels
The original post is somewhat confusing in that it talks about voicing, but I'm going to assume that a pause here means not just lack of voicing but complete lack of airflow (required for "a lack of sound").
I'm by no means an expert but I think their may be a physiological barrier to using "true pauses" phonemically in that we don't have that precise control over the airflow from our lungs. It takes a while for all air in one breath to travel out of our mouth so it's a bit difficult to time the end of the airflow so that the pause occurs at the right point in a word. If you want to interrupt the airflow quickly, the way to do it is by closing the glottis, but that's specifically not what you're asking for.
I'm by no means an expert but I think their may be a physiological barrier to using "true pauses" phonemically in that we don't have that precise control over the airflow from our lungs. It takes a while for all air in one breath to travel out of our mouth so it's a bit difficult to time the end of the airflow so that the pause occurs at the right point in a word. If you want to interrupt the airflow quickly, the way to do it is by closing the glottis, but that's specifically not what you're asking for.
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Re: Pauses with or instead of Long Vowels
The closest thing I can think of is glottal stops and ejective stops. In some languages with ejective stops there is something of a noticible delay between release of the stop closure and release of the glottal closure.Αυτοβοτα wrote:I was thinking about the concept of a musical rest and how musicians are encouraged to "play" it. I wondered whether that could be applied to language. Is there any precedent of a pause in a word with a similar beat to a long vowel? And I don't mean with gemination or glottal closure--simply just a lack of sound. You could compare it to a long voice-onset time (using zero as representative of the pause): /t0a/ (delayed VOT) vs. /ja0ta/ (post-vocalic pause). And if such a thing existed, post-vocalically, does or could it contrast with a long vowel, in which the entire length is taken up by voicing? E.g., /jata/ vs. /ja0ta/ vs. /ja:ta/.
So, for example the oft cited Cockney pronunciation of the word "bottle" /bɔʔl/ or common American pronunciation of "button" /bʌʔn̩/
I'm sure there is a language out there somewhere that has long vowels and post-vocalic or intervocalic glottal stops.
Re: Pauses with or instead of Long Vowels
So it's not feasible without some sort of glottal, whether a stop or (pre-)aspiration.
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Re: Pauses with or instead of Long Vowels
It might be worth noting that [h] is not really a glottal sound; it isn't characterized by a constriction of the airway at any specific point of articulation, with the shape of the vocal tract being shaped entirely by surrounding sounds. Indeed, it can justifiably be said that the only salient feature of [h] is voicelessness.Αυτοβοτα wrote:So it's not feasible without some sort of glottal, whether a stop or (pre-)aspiration.
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Re: Pauses with or instead of Long Vowels
No, the closest things to that are glottal stops, gemination, aspiration and preaspiration, and so on.
There's a language that shifted /k g/ to a fortis and lenis glottal stop.
There's a language that shifted /k g/ to a fortis and lenis glottal stop.
Siöö jandeng raiglin zåbei tandiüłåd;
nää džunnfin kukuch vklaivei sivei tåd.
Chei. Chei. Chei. Chei. Chei. Chei. Chei.
nää džunnfin kukuch vklaivei sivei tåd.
Chei. Chei. Chei. Chei. Chei. Chei. Chei.
Re: Pauses with or instead of Long Vowels
Moar info plizNortaneous wrote:There's a language that shifted /k g/ to a fortis and lenis glottal stop.
"To those who seek the solace of eternity, may journey down the river through the sacred Gates of Iss and find everlasting peace in the bosom of Issus"
Re: Pauses with or instead of Long Vowels
Several. Cockney itself amongst English dialects, and if you want the contrast in standard orthography, just go to Thai.CaesarVincens wrote: So, for example the oft cited Cockney pronunciation of the word "bottle" /bɔʔl/ or common American pronunciation of "button" /bʌʔn̩/
I'm sure there is a language out there somewhere that has long vowels and post-vocalic or intervocalic glottal stops.
Re: Pauses with or instead of Long Vowels
The Proto Mixe-Zoque language has an interesting array of vowel options regarding that, if I understand you correctly.Richard W wrote:Several. Cockney itself amongst English dialects, and if you want the contrast in standard orthography, just go to Thai.CaesarVincens wrote: So, for example the oft cited Cockney pronunciation of the word "bottle" /bɔʔl/ or common American pronunciation of "button" /bʌʔn̩/
I'm sure there is a language out there somewhere that has long vowels and post-vocalic or intervocalic glottal stops.
As the Wiki gives them:
Code: Select all
V – short vowel
V' – short vowel with glottal stop
VV – long vowel
V'V – long vowel with medial glottal stop
VV' – long vowel with final glottal stop
Vh – short vowel with h
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Re: Pauses with or instead of Long Vowels
According to a grammar of Ayutla Mixe I found, it even contrasts Vʰ and VVʰ (vowels) with Vh and VVh (closed syllables). [Also, most varieties of Mixe - though not Ayutla - are described as having three vowel lengths]. At least some Oto-Mangean languages have a similar contrast contrast between long, ʔ-interrupted, and h-interrupted vowels (almost all of them at least have plain versus creaky or plain versus ʔ-interrupted). And Mayan often have both short and long vowels with h-codas and ʔ-codas plus VʔV, except in Mayan they're usually described as vowel-consonant sequences, I think, though they sometimes act like single vowels (/oo/ is [oo] but /oʔo/ is [ɵʔʉ] in some Mam dialects), while in Mixe-Zoque and Oto-Mangean they're described as features of the vowels, though some of them clearly have vowel-consonant origins (one innovated VʰV from things like ahi > eʰe [made-up example, can't find the language now]).
Pretty sure I remember some languages - something Salish or Wakashan maybe? - that are in free variation between VʔC' and VVC'. That is, ejectives are either preceded by a glottal stop or a long vowel, but it doesn't matter which. And apparently some of the Mayan languages that otherwise don't distinguish length lengthen vowels before an ejective/implosive.
Pretty sure I remember some languages - something Salish or Wakashan maybe? - that are in free variation between VʔC' and VVC'. That is, ejectives are either preceded by a glottal stop or a long vowel, but it doesn't matter which. And apparently some of the Mayan languages that otherwise don't distinguish length lengthen vowels before an ejective/implosive.