Hey all!
I was wondering, do languages which show vowel harmony seem to separate the classes of words (based on vowels) by what they mean? (eg: are colours front-vowel words, and days of the week back-vowel words, or something?). Or is the distribution more random?
Thanks!
Vowel harmony and words
Vowel harmony and words
[url=http://alamantias.wikidot.com/]Gâh-en-t-izameni maxš bâqân! (Erâni)
Visit my conworld website! (English)[/url]
Visit my conworld website! (English)[/url]
Yeah, for the most part I'm not sure there's any kind of semantic categorisation attributed to vowel harmony, e.g. colour=front, day names=back, etc. However, one example often cited comes from Manchu in which "ama" means "husband" and "eme" means "wife" and similarly "haha" means "man" and "hehe" means "woman" suggesting front vowels are feminine and back vowels are masculine. However, the example texts provided by wikipedia provide a counterexample in "sargan", also meaning "woman", suggesting the male-female thing only occurs sometimes.bricka wrote:The distinction is very unlikely to be meaningful in any way; the backness of the vowels is just another phonological feature, like voicing in consonants.
You can tell the same lie a thousand times,
But it never gets any more true,
So close your eyes once more and once more believe
That they all still believe in you.
Just one time.
But it never gets any more true,
So close your eyes once more and once more believe
That they all still believe in you.
Just one time.
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Not as far as I know in natlangs, but if you want to develop that sort of thing in a conlang, use classifiers or something, fuse them to the noun, and develop vowel harmony from whichever end they fuse to. For example, if English developed front-back vowel harmony, the days would all have front vowels (since they all end in /de/~/dI/). And if, say, "color" became a classifier /kV/ and fused to the end of the color names somehow, the colors would all have back vowels once harmony developed.
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.
I can see vowel harmony coming to largely align with a formal gender system, which in turn will largely align with natural gender if it's a IE-ish gender system. Let's say that -i is a final vowel which marks the feminine gender (just like Spanish does with -a). If that -i triggers front vowel harmony, and then is lost, suddenly you have a whole bunch of feminine words with front vowel harmony, but the feminine words which happened not to end in -i won't necessarily have it, and masculine words which happened to end in -i (like, the opposite situation of mano in Spanish, which is feminine but has a masculine -o vowel), will likewise have front vowel harmony but still be masculine.
con quesa- firm believer in the right of Spanish cheese to be female if she so chooses
"There's nothing inherently different between knowing who Venusaur is and knowing who Lady Macbeth is" -Xephyr
"There's nothing inherently different between knowing who Venusaur is and knowing who Lady Macbeth is" -Xephyr
I made a map of the Finnish names of the cities and municipalities in southern Finland. Red: consists of front vowels (takes endings like -ssä/-llä). Green: consists of back vowels (takes endings like -ssa/-lla). (If the name was a compound, I only looked at the last word.)
The distribution isn't entirely random: names that consist of front vowels are rarely found on the coast and are usually clustered together.
The distribution isn't entirely random: names that consist of front vowels are rarely found on the coast and are usually clustered together.
Now just account also for the fact that back vowels are more numerous overall. 
While there is no general separation according to backness, words with /ö/ (discounting /öy yö/) are almost universally "affectiv" in their flavor. Sometimes there are even corresponding neutral-register words:
henki "spirit, breath" ~ hönki- "to breathe or pant loudly at something"
letku "hose" ~ lötkö "something slack or squiggly"
lokoile- ~ lököile- "to lie about"
mämmi "malted rye pudding" ~ mömmö "sludge"
Finnish may not be the best example however, since vowel harmony is an ancient feature. I'd expect a language that has recently develop'd vowel harmony to display some backness-changing derivation patterns (as we see in eg. Germanic umlaut). There may be some ancient ones still lingering in Uralic too tho (most conspicuously *jalka "foot" ~ *jälki "footprint)
While there is no general separation according to backness, words with /ö/ (discounting /öy yö/) are almost universally "affectiv" in their flavor. Sometimes there are even corresponding neutral-register words:
henki "spirit, breath" ~ hönki- "to breathe or pant loudly at something"
letku "hose" ~ lötkö "something slack or squiggly"
lokoile- ~ lököile- "to lie about"
mämmi "malted rye pudding" ~ mömmö "sludge"
Finnish may not be the best example however, since vowel harmony is an ancient feature. I'd expect a language that has recently develop'd vowel harmony to display some backness-changing derivation patterns (as we see in eg. Germanic umlaut). There may be some ancient ones still lingering in Uralic too tho (most conspicuously *jalka "foot" ~ *jälki "footprint)
[ˌʔaɪsəˈpʰɻ̊ʷoʊpɪɫ ˈʔæɫkəɦɔɫ]
Re: Vowel harmony and words
Korean, which makes extensive use of vowel harmony for purposes of sound symbolism, actually splits colours into two categories according to traditional vowel categories. Those with historically back vowels ("light isotopes", in Samuel Martin's terminology) typically designate lighter and clearer hues than those with historically front vowels ("heavy isotopes").daryush wrote:I was wondering, do languages which show vowel harmony seem to separate the classes of words (based on vowels) by what they mean? (eg: are colours front-vowel words, and days of the week back-vowel words, or something?). Or is the distribution more random?
Last edited by linguoboy on Fri Sep 03, 2010 4:38 pm, edited 1 time in total.




