Series shifts and mergers in the obstruent phonology of Tahltan (Northern Athabaskan)
John Alderete, Amber Blenkiron, Judy C. Thompson[ed?sdi]
direct link: http://ling.auf.net/lingbuzz/004221
September 2018
A survey was conducted to investigate the development of the Proto-Athabaskan obstruent series, *ts/tš/tšr/k, into present day Tahltan. Results from seven native speakers and quantitative analysis of a larger corpus establish t?/ts/ts/tš as the standard obstruent system, alongside three alternate systems that relate to independently motivated historical changes. These findings support the long-held view that differences in the obstruent reflexes do not reflect deep phonological differences among Northern Athabaskan languages, but instead represent areal influences and patterns of individual variation in a highly dynamic language network.
Format: | [ pdf ] |
Reference: | lingbuzz/004221 (please use that when you cite this article) |
Published in: | Linguistic Discovery (to appear) |
keywords: | sound change, mergers, chain shifts, affricates, obstruents, contact, athabaskan, tahltan, phonology |