catawba phonems /r/, /d/, and /n/
BARudes at aol.com
BARudes at aol.com
Mon Oct 4 17:46:48 UTC 1999
Ogalala2
I have a draft of a rather length paper on Catawba phonology, based largely
on conversations with Frank Siebert, Jr., before his death and his field
notes. To make a long story short, /r/ and /n/ are underlying phonemes for
Catawba. /d/ is, in most cases, a derived phoneme. It comes from a change
of /r/ to /d/ in word-initial position, the denasalization of /n/ to /d/
before oral vowels, and the voicing of /t/ to /d/ before a voiced consonant.
Some cases of word-initial /n/ derive from /r/ through nasalization before a
nasal vowel or an oral vowel followed by a nasal consonant. However, the
majority of cases of /n/ cannot be so derived. If you email me your
snail-mail address, I will send you a copy of the paper. (I cannot send it
by email or as an attachment because I use a lot of special characters.)
Blair A. Rudes
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