6.530 German Affricates

The Linguist List linguist at tam2000.tamu.edu
Sun Apr 9 21:23:30 UTC 1995


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LINGUIST List:  Vol-6-530. Sun 09 Apr 1995. ISSN: 1068-4875. Lines: 226
 
Subject: 6.530 German Affricates
 
Moderators: Anthony Rodrigues Aristar: Texas A&M U. <aristar at tam2000.tamu.edu>
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               Ann Dizdar <dizdar at tam2000.tamu.edu>
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1)
Date: Fri, 7 Apr 1995 17:54:57 -0400 (EDT)
From: Desrochers Richard (desrochr at ERE.UMontreal.CA)
Subject: Re: 6.472 German Affricates
 
2)
Date: Sat, 8 Apr 1995 08:59:09 -0400
From: Alexis Manaster Ramer (amr at CS.Wayne.EDU)
Subject: Re:  6.524 German Affricates
 
3)
Date:    Fri, 07 Apr 95 22:01 PDT
From: benji wald                           (IBENAWJ at MVS.OAC.UCLA.EDU)
Subject: Re: 6.524 German Affricates
 
-------------------------Messages--------------------------------------
1)
Date: Fri, 7 Apr 1995 17:54:57 -0400 (EDT)
From: Desrochers Richard (desrochr at ERE.UMontreal.CA)
Subject: Re: 6.472 German Affricates
 
        I agree with A. Manaster-Ramer that perceptual considerations
should overcome distributiuonal or etymological considerations (in my
opinion, etymological ones are the least important, if they have any).
But as just pointed out one native-speaker of German, perceptual cues are
not quite obvious and may sometimes contradict themselves. Even syllable
"boudaries" are quite variable for a same speaker. But we must always try
to tell apart phonetic considerations from phonological statements, which
do not respond to the same criteria.
        In Quebec French, there is a conditioned variant [ts] for /t/
before high front vowels and glides. There is absolutely no constant
difference instrumentally detectable between this [ts] and the sequence
/t+s/ in other words like "tsar" or "tzigane", and this [ts] may be
heterosyllabic as well as tautosyllabic between vowels if we rely on
phonetic facts. We can use phonetic arguments only if phonetic "facts" are
constant enough. English /tS/ is sometimes analysed as one phoneme,
sometimes two phonemes, since phonotactic considerations contradict
themeselves, and phonological statements are more (ideally) submitted to
criteria like "generality of statements", "economy of description or of
entities" in the absence of clear phonetic criteria. The ideal situation
is when all arguments converge; as to German tsch, I think the best way
to settle for a "decision" (always dependant on theorical assumptions) is
by a thorough survey of occurences, status of words, speaker's intuition,
preferred syllabification. I would guess, for the time being, that even
if it occurs in word initial position,the number of examples is quite
limited, and means only that there is no constraint on this pronunciation
word-initially. What strikes me hte most is how difficult it seems to
find intervocalic tS with no (putative) morpheme-boundary (in which I do
not quite believe, but this is not the point) on either side. (The fact
that there is a apocope in entschuldigung has only to do with what I
would call "lexical" reduction at the phonetic level; French does not
have the sequence /ms/ word-initially, and for a very frequent word like
"monsieur" you have [msjo"] or, to stay with the same kind of expression, a
word like "excusez" becomes [sku"ze], although nobody has ever
demonstrated that graphic "x" is a sequence and not a monophonematic
/ks/. Anything can happen in allegro - or, say, hypoarticulated speech).
Maybe one other argument possible would be to find german dialects
where tS has become t, whereas other post-consonantal S are intact.
        In the worst case, we only end up with undecidable analyses like
for English tS.
                                                R. Desrochers
 
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2)
Date: Sat, 8 Apr 1995 08:59:09 -0400
From: Alexis Manaster Ramer (amr at CS.Wayne.EDU)
Subject: Re:  6.524 German Affricates
 
Re: Ellen Contini-Morava's posting, the point is an affricate
and a sequence of stop + fricative are NOT "audibly indistinguishable".
The fact that they contrast in Polish (a fact which was known to
Bloomfield and which I just see mentioned in Sihler's book on
Greek and Latin) proves that beyond any doubt.  The only question
is which of the two phonetic types is used in those situations
in those languages where there IS no contrast.
Just in case, the Polish forms that contrast are written
'cz' vs. 'trz' and examples of the contrast include 'trzech' ('three'-
gen. pl.) vs. 'Czech' ('Czech').
 
Alexis MR
 
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3)
Date:    Fri, 07 Apr 95 22:01 PDT
From: benji wald                           (IBENAWJ at MVS.OAC.UCLA.EDU)
Subject: Re: 6.524 German Affricates
 
I didn't at first pay attention to the "one-phoneme-or-two" discussion
emanating  from the analysis of German affricates".  The problem
is classically familiar to me, but at first I considered it a
pointless game of pin the label on the  phoneme, using the game
rules of a persistent but out-moded phonemic theory --  the
"bi-unique" phoneme with its Neogrammarian/behaviorist ideological
trappings .  However, a quote from Alexis caught my attention
when Leo Connolly cited it with a retort.  It goes:
 
 Alexis Manaster Ramer (amr at CS.Wayne.EDU) writes:
 
)Richard Desrochers and David Powers seem to me to miss the point
)about the distinction between one-segment affricates and two
)segment sequences of stop+fricative.  Distributional and
)etymological arguments are irrelevant if the distinction is
)audible (whether there is a contrast in the language in question
)or not).
 
More recently Alexis added:
 
 "If you believe in both phonemes and) underlying
representations, for example..."
 
I'm not a fan of "believing in" as opposed to trying to make sense out
of FACTS, but  I want to join the issue on the key concepts of
"distribution", "etymology" and "audible" mentioned in the first quote.
To begin with, I can't see why any of the above has any more bearing on
the classic issue of "one segment or two" than on "one phoneme or two".
So my comments below don't make that distinction.
 
With respect to "distribution", I can't imagine how that can be irrelevant
to any phonemic analysis, whatever belief system the analyst operates with.
However, I'm willing to concede that there was a larger context to the
discussion which I missed, but which makes sense out of what Alexis is
saying about distribution.  Therefore, I'll drop any further comment on
that aspect of the quote.
 
With regard to "etymology" being irrelevant, I could only interpret that
as the archaic position that grammatical information such as morpheme (and
word????) boundaries are irrelevant -- and I was surprised that Alexis would
make that claim in view of his previous interest in the "rider" vs. "writer"
contrast in the vast majority of North American (t-flapping) English
dialects.  Connolly's example with the lack of effect on syllable-final
German phonetic processes of the diminutive suffix (clitic or
affective suffix?) -chen was similar in point.  Does Alexis maintain that
before the flap the contrast between the two diphthongs is "phonemic"?
 
If so, as was argued pointlessly in the 50s, does that mean that there
is a phonemic contrast just before flapped /t/, or that in all contexts
(once a phoneme always a phoneme) there is a phonemic contrast, so that
write and ride differ both in a vowel phoneme and (perhaps) a final
stop phoneme?
 
Next the issue of audibility -- and that might even affect the answer
to the question above about writer/rider.  Audibility is a vague notion,
despite Alexis's pride in his German case.  Like Alexis, I can teach
people to hear the difference in English, if they can't without help,
at least for my dialect and many others.  But that does not mean that I
assume they use it in decoding speech -- or would ordinarily be able
to consistently distinguish the words in isolation based on the length
and/or vowel quality cues, EVEN THOUGH THEY MAY CONSISTENTLY MAKE THE
DISTINCTION IN SPEECH THEMSELVES.  Note that here I am being more
relevantly specific than Alexis's example of Cantonese tones.  I may
not be able to distinguish all the Cantonese  tones, but is Alexis
considering that maybe some Cantonese speakers make all the tone
distinctions but can't  "hear" all the differences? That's the issue I'm
raising with respect to the "audibility" of the writer/rider distinction.
 
Meanwhile, I don't in fact know what a decontextualised test of writer/
rider for speakers who make the distinction would produce.  A more
interesting example to me is the difference between PRINCE and PRINTS
(if there is one). (This is another "old chestnut", to be sure.)
The reason is as follows.  In most dialects of English,
including mine, final -t before n-, as in PRINT, TENT etc
is reduced to a glottal stop with "inaudible" apical occlusion.
There is no release of the final "t".  (Similar things happen,
by the way, in many German dialects).  This notwithstanding, I
cannot, for the life of me, figure out whether I glottalise
PRINT when I pluralise it to PRINTS, no matter how much I think
about it or say it to myself. Sometimes I think I do or can.
Sometimes I think I don't -- because if I try to emphasise it to
get a CLEARLY audible contrast with PRINCE, it feels
exaggerated.  In any case, I think I do make a contrast, but even
I, for all my auditory acuity, do not think I would be able to hear my
contrast if I heard it played back to me.  I would, of course, be interested
in what other English speakers think, and also whether there are comparable
problems in German.
 
In the meantime, my point is that "audibility" is not a sufficiently
clear criterion for establishing PHONETIC contrasts (as input for
"phonemic" contrasts?)  If, as I suspect, there is a widely used
 distinction between PRINTS and PRINCE, it is a result of a learned
phonetic process by English speakers such that syllable coda /t/ is
glottalised following /n/ (and in certain other contexts in various
dialects -- unconditionally in some British dialects).  Whatever
cross-glide "t" which may be produced in some of these dialects between
/n/ and /s/ is a distinct phonetic process (possibly not even learned)
which does not have the same phonetic effect of glottalisation.
 
We should see if this process exists, instead of just babbling about it.
I hope it does, because I am quite sure it is totally useless to
speakers for distinguishing words, or whatever phonemes are supposed to
do.  Then we can rethink what phonemic analysis is or should be, as if
there weren't enough examples of the phenomenon in the literature (e.g.,
Labov's studies of "near mergers" -- maybe our first paper on them in
1969 had something to do with my agitation over the simplistic notion
of "audibility").
 
The moral may be that such "biunique" concepts of the phoneme as
Alexis seems to endorse in his above statement may have some force
in the economy of any particular language, and therefore that form
of analysis works UP TO A POINT when an  analyst  is exploring the
phonological structure of a newly  encountered  language, BUT that
it will not ALWAYS work (in ANY language), and more complex processes
will have to be recognised (as most theories do -- but many then go
too far, of course, and start building much of the history of the
language into their analyses from morphophonemic residues).  The
more complex processes then challenge the "relevance" of such notions
as "audibility", blindness to "etymology", i.e., grammatical structure
(and, in fact, lexical structure) and, inevitably, that speakers
of a language are in all ways ignorant of the (recent) history
of the language they speak.   Benji
 
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