conférence de Michael J. Kenstowicz (M.I.T.) : salle D 143
AROUI Jean-Louis
aroui at UNIV-PARIS8.FR
Fri Nov 14 15:12:22 UTC 2008
La salle de la conférence de M. Kenstowicz, annoncée précédemment, aura lieu à
l'université Paris VIII en salle D 143 (salle qui est finalement disponible).
Ci-dessous, pour rappel, les détails concernant la conférence.
L'UMR 7023 a le plaisir de vous convier, dans le cadre des séances de son
séminaire (http://www.umr7023.cnrs.fr/spip.php?article667),
le lundi 17 novembre 2008
10h00-12h00,
Université Paris VIII, 2, rue de la liberté, 93200 Saint-Denis (métro
Saint-Denis Université, ligne 13)
salle D143,
à une conférence de Michael J. Kenstowicz (M.I.T.)
intitulée
« Emphatic Consonants and the Adaptation of Vowels in French Loanwords into
Moroccan Arabic » (joint research with Nabila Louriz, University Hassan II).
Résumé :
It is well known that redundant (enhancing) features in a vowel can signal a
phonemic contrast in an adjacent consonant. For example, English vowel
duration and nasality are tied directly to the voicing and nasality of a
following consonant. In Mandarin Chinese [±back] in a vowel correlates with
coronal vs. velar nasal in following consonant. Hsieh et al (2005) show that
when western loanwords with conflicting vowel and coda nasal combinations
[an] and [æng] are adapted into Mandarin, the redundant vowel rather than the
distinctive consonant determines the outcome—a result they attribute to the
relative saliency of the phonologically redundant vocalic difference vis a
vis the consonant. In his groundbreaking study of borrowings into Moroccan
Arabic, Heath (1989) identified another striking example of this phenomenon,
observing that the mid vowels of French <moquette> are preserved by
introducing emphasis (pharyngealization) on the consonants in the
loan /MukeT/. He also pointed to the variability of the phenomenon since
Spanish muñeca is borrowed as MA /munik-a/ rather than /muNek-a/
or /MuNek-a/. In this presentation we review the results of a detailed study
of this phenomenon from a corpus of c. 1,800 French loans. We discuss the
competing phonological and phonetic factors that underlie the adaptations and
appear to give rise to its variability.
--
Jean-Louis AROUI
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