Status of "u" in Omaha-Ponca
Rankin, Robert L
rankin at ku.edu
Sat Aug 13 22:00:17 UTC 2005
Hi Ted,
Yes, proto-Siouan *u merged with "i" just as you say. But THEN, afterward, "o" began being pronounced as "u". So nowadays there are still only 4 oral vowels, i, e, a, u. (As recently as the 1970's I was still hearing many of the modern "u" sounds still pronounced as "o".
Bob
________________________________
From: owner-siouan at lists.colorado.edu on behalf of Ogalala2 at aol.com
Sent: Sat 8/13/2005 12:18 PM
To: siouan at lists.colorado.edu
Subject: Status of "u" in Omaha-Ponca
I need the Dheghan scholars to clarify the status of "u" in Omaha-Ponca. I was surprised to hear that Om-Po "u" was lost leaving only four oral vowels in this language. This loss occurred when u>ue>i. The oral "u" (not fronted) occurs in the works of Fletcher &
La Flesche, Dorsey, Boaz, and all others that I am familiar with. How is this to be explained? Is the loss of "u" a recent occurrence? Is there another explanation? Please clarify this issue for me.
Thanks, Ted Grimm
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