Question about the length of the vowels in nahuatl.
Michael Mccafferty
mmccaffe at indiana.edu
Thu Apr 29 12:30:42 UTC 1999
Mr. Pena-Arellano,
Here's the thing.
Vowel length *is* contrastive in Nahuatl as is it is in other native
American languages. In Unami, for example, there are even long
*consonants*.
However, since long vowels were not contrastive in the languages of the
Europeans who first recorded all these languages, they rarely received any
special notation. Miami-Illinois, a Central Algonquian language, has
*highly* contrastive short and long vowels, and yet the early Jesuits who
recorded this language *never* heard it, although one cannot doubt that
comical events occurred in their efforts to use the language.
I learned Classical Nahuatl without paying attention to vowel length,
except for those few well-known words like /toka/ and /to:ka/, things like
that. It seems that the trend in Nahuatl studies is to take the vowel
lengths in the entire corpus of the language more seriously.
Best regards,
Michael McCafferty
==========================================================
"Across the Rio Grande-o
across the lazy river..."
-Robert Hunter
Michael McCafferty
C.E.L.T.
307 Memorial Hall
Indiana University
Bloomington, Indiana
47405
mmccaffe at indiana.edu
More information about the Nahuat-l
mailing list