piltlahcuiloltzin tlen CH
Campbell, R. Joe
campbel at indiana.edu
Thu Sep 30 03:39:34 UTC 2010
John,
One detail that is missing has to do with the release of the air --
when sounds like [p t k] are released, we can say that the air is
"suddenly" released, but in the case of affricates (pardon my
non-phonetic characters) like [ch j tl], the space of time between the
complete stoppage and the onset of the following vowel is occupied by
friction, caused by the fact that the articulators remained briefly in
a certain crucial proximity to each other.
Or, in other words, the contact is released slowly, resulting in
friction during the release period.
Joe
Quoting John Sullivan <idiez at me.com>:
> CH. piltlahcuiloltzin. Quimanextia tentlatzacuilcayotl tlen caquizti
> quemman motzacua tocopac, tonenepilpatlauhca quitzacua ihyotl campa
> quinamiqui iican tocamatapalpamiuh, tonenepil eli quentzin comoltic,
> itehtenno quinamiqui tocamatapalpamiuh huan quiztihuetzi ihyotl
> itlahcotiyan tocamac.
>
> CH. letter. Represents the consonant that is heard when the velum
> closes, the middle of the tongue touches the back of the alveolar
> ridge and stops the airflow, the tongue becomes slightly concave, its
> sides touch the alveolar ridge, and the air is suddenly released
> through the middle of the mouth.
>
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