Pronunciation Questions
Campbell, R Joe
campbel at indiana.edu
Wed Feb 21 18:04:09 UTC 2007
Doug,
Put me down as one of the people on Nahuat-l who appreciates your
questions and, who (I hope) has gained from your encouraging us to
probe what we know and what we don't know.
Andrews' statement (p. 36) that /m/ becomes [n] (and *voiceless*)
when "left exposed" at the end of a syllable or vocable is obviously at
least partially correct. Although /m/ and /n/ contrast before a vowel
in the same word, they neutralize 1) in word final position (resulting
in [n]) or 2) before a consonant:
1
tlami it ends up
otlan it ended up
2
tzontecomatl head
tzonteconcocolli headache
The "partially" refers to his claim that the [n] is voiceless. He
gives no reason that devoicing occurs, nor does he cite a source. This
isn't fatal, since he frequently makes claims about Nahuatl without the
kind of evidence which most late 20th century linguists feel compelled
to -- and then if one examines relevant data, he finds that the support
is there for Andrews' claim!
However, I have searched and reflected at length and I have found no
basis for this "devoicing" claim. Further, I have difficulty in
imagining it to be true. Now, while this may be due more to the limits
on my imagination than to the facts of Nahuatl pronunciation, I doubt
it. Also, I know that we are discussing "classical" Nahuatl, but I
believe that modern dialects are helpful in inferring what the older
stages of the language were like. And in spite of having familiarity
with a number of modern dialects, I have never heard a final voiceless
nasal. (I have to concede that if they existed, they would be
relatively hard to heard, but I *listen*!!)
> 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?
Iztayohmeh,
Joe
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