Phonetic and Phonological Features of Approximants in Athabaskan and Eskimo
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Eung-Do Cook
Abstract
The Athabaskan and Eskimo approximants, particularly [j], [w], and [l], behave phonologically like obstruents. In both language families, [j], which alternates with a sibilant, is phonologically [+coronal], although its coronality has been questioned on phonetic grounds. These approximants best illustrate Sapir’s [1925] notion of ‘a true point in pattern’ which must be defined ‘over and above its natural [phonetic] classification on organic and acoustic grounds’. The fact that approximants are classified phonologically as sonorants or obstruents in different languages is incompatible with the universality of distinctive features and their phonetic properties. This problem is resolved by placing a phonological boundary for [+/––sonorant] somewhat differently in the continuum of the sonority hierarchy, depending on how approximants behave in individual languages.
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© 1993 S. Karger AG, Basel
Articles in the same Issue
- Further Section
- Contents, Vol. 50, 1993
- Original Paper
- A Gestural Production Model and Its Application to Reduction in German
- Phonetic and Phonological Features of Approximants in Athabaskan and Eskimo
- Cross-Language Influence on the Production of Mandarin /f/ and /x/ and Taiwanese /h/ by Native Speakers of Taiwanese Amoy
- The Use of Prosody in Disambiguation in Mandarin
- Further Section
- Libri
- Index autorum
- Publications Received for Review
- Announcement
Articles in the same Issue
- Further Section
- Contents, Vol. 50, 1993
- Original Paper
- A Gestural Production Model and Its Application to Reduction in German
- Phonetic and Phonological Features of Approximants in Athabaskan and Eskimo
- Cross-Language Influence on the Production of Mandarin /f/ and /x/ and Taiwanese /h/ by Native Speakers of Taiwanese Amoy
- The Use of Prosody in Disambiguation in Mandarin
- Further Section
- Libri
- Index autorum
- Publications Received for Review
- Announcement