Pronunciation Questions
Doug Barr
lingoman at mac.com
Tue Feb 20 18:51:37 UTC 2007
Hello, all -
I was so good and saved all my grammar questions until my copy of
"Introduction to Classical Nahuatl" showed up, but now I have some
pronunciation questions which Andrews doesn't answer (and in one
case, raises).
1. He talks about 'n' and 'w' becoming unvoiced at the end of
syllables, but not about 'l'. I've seen elsewhere (on the Net) a
statement that 'l' also becomes devoiced, which I gather would sound
like the release of 'tl,' i.e. an unvoiced lateral fricative. Is this
common? And I assume 'm' at the end of syllables in words like
*ipampa* would do the same?
2. Secondary stress, especially in compound words: does stress simply
proceed back every second syllable from the penultimate, or does the
normally stressed syllable of each component other than the last
receive secondary stress? For example, "nixochitemoa," "I seek
flowers." Would that be - using capital letters for stressed
syllables - NIxoChIteMOa with regular alternation of stressed and
unstressed syllables, or niXOchiteMOa, putting secondary stress on
the XO of XOchi(tl) as would be done if it were an independent word?
I'm guessing the latter, since he says that there is a point of
'internal open transition' - i.e. slight but audible pause - between
the constituents of a compound, which is sometimes recognized in the
traditional spelling, but confirmation or denial would be helpful...
3. Andrews says, "a ([voiceless n]) phone resulting from this change
(of -m at the end of a word to voiceless n) reverts to the original /
m/ sound when the following vocable of the stress group begins with a
vowel. For example, *in i:i:xpan* is pronounced ([phonetic
transcription of *im i:i:xpan*]) and in some texts is written *im
i:i:xpan*." OK, so is 'in' always pronounced as 'im' before words
beginning with a vowel, or at least words it's linked to? Why then
the classical transcription *ini:n* rather than *imi:n*, etc.?
Confused...
Tlazohcamati!
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