Prefix Reform: Difference between revisions

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The {{t|ẹ'ano}} gotcha disappears: the displaced diacritic mark in {{t|eàno}} is enough to communicate that {{t|e}} is a separate morpheme and {{t|ano}} should open with a (now mandatory) glottal stop.
:<small>The {{t|ẹano}} gotcha does not disappear per se. However, with the prefix reform, it is much easier to see that prefixes are not “special” raku that can be tacked on the front of a word willy-nilly: {{t|e<u>'àno</u>}} is spelled exactly the same as {{t|<u>e'ano</u>}}, just with the stress shifted away from the first syllable. Colloquially, the glottal stop could be omitted – {{t|e<u>àno</u>}} and {{t|buq<u>ùgı</u>}} can only be understood in exactly one way – however, watch out for codal {{t|m}}: {{t|ra<u>màno</u>}} ≠ {{t|ram<u>'àno</u>}}.</small>


==Pronunciation changes==
==Pronunciation changes==

Revision as of 22:08, 30 December 2023

Prefix Reform is a proposal by uakci to change how prefixes interact with the stems of words.

Note: the two parts of the proposal, the spelling changes and the pronunciation changes, could be considered independently of each other.

Reasons

Prefixes as done officially are subtle and hard to teach, especially in terms of pronunciation:

  • They interact with vowel length in non-obvious ways: bộtao [bŏʔŏ] vs. bô'otao [boːʔo].
  • They’re not computer-friendly to spell. Some combinations, especially ones involving ı̣ (that’s a dotless i with an underdot diacritic!), take a lot of effort to input (and Unicode normalizes that character to ị, which is not the same) and display poorly on many people’s systems.
  • There's a gotcha involving vowel-initial stems: e- + ano is not ẹano [ˈʔĕʔĕano] but ẹ'ano [ˈʔɛ̆ʔɛ̆ʔaːno]. The latter decomposes as ea- + no! Looking at the IPA transcriptions, we may conclude that the language is actually sensitive to three vowel lengths, [ɛ̆~ĕ ɛ eː].

Spelling changes

Instead of putting the tone mark on the first syllable, put it on the first syllable of the stem. In the case of a word with falling tone, use mid-falling tone as the diacritic. Examples:

Official Proposal
falling tone mụfoaq mufòaq
rising tone lạ́maı lamáı
glottal tone tọ̈ꝡa (invalid word) toꝡä
hiatus tone bộtao botâo
The ẹano gotcha does not disappear per se. However, with the prefix reform, it is much easier to see that prefixes are not “special” raku that can be tacked on the front of a word willy-nilly: e'àno is spelled exactly the same as e'ano, just with the stress shifted away from the first syllable. Colloquially, the glottal stop could be omitted – eàno and buqùgı can only be understood in exactly one way – however, watch out for codal m: ramànoram'àno.

Pronunciation changes

A chart showing the spelling and pronunciation changes. The pink segments are pronounced with unstressed, short, closed vowels (here [kʰʊ̌˧]).
  • Stress the first syllable of the stem rather than the prefix. For instance, in puchumgòıchuq ‘was taking medicine’, stress the -goı-, no different than bugòıchuq ‘doesn’t/isn’t taking medicine’ or even just goıchuq ‘take medicine’.
  • This stressed syllable should be louder and/or longer and/or more extreme in terms of the tone contour.
  • The unstressed prefix syllables should use the weak forms of their core vowels: /u/ goes to [ʊ], /i/ goes to [ɪ], /o/ goes to [ɔ]. These contextual allophones are already used elsewhere in the language – namely, [ɔ] appears in /ɔj/, and the three are also triggered before q, e.g., bıq [bɪŋ] and not [biŋ]. Now imagine this is yet another context for them to be weakened. This leads to spicy phonoaesthetics not seen anywhere else in the language: jıa- [dʑɪa]!
  • The unstressed prefix syllables should be shortened with regards to regular vowel length: bunúq ‘the non-snake’ could be [bʊ̌nʊq]. (◌̆, the breve, is used to signal “extra-short” vowel length in the IPA.) At any rate, they should sound shorter than the stressed syllable of the stem (so [bʊnuː] for bunú is fine).
  • In terms of tone: always pronounce all prefixes with the mid level tone, [˧]. Extra care should be taken not to allow the tone to slide upwards or downwards as it’s pronounced – in other words, avoid *[˧˦] or *[˧˨].

Illustrative examples:

Official Proposal
puchụmtao [ˈpuː˥˨t͡ɕŭʔŭm˨˩tʰaw˩] puchumtào [pʊ˧t͡ɕʊm˧ˈtaːw˥˩]
jı̣achıa [ˈd͡ʑĭʔĭa˥˨t͡ɕia˨˩] jıachìa [d͡ʑɪa˧ˈt͡ɕiːa˥˩]
lạ́maı bẹ́ıroı [ˈlăʔă˨˦maj˦˥ ˈbɛ̆ʔɛ̆j˨˩rɔj˩] lamáı beıróı [la˧ˈmaj˧˥ bɛj˧ˈrɔj˧˩]
*tọ̈ꝡa (invalid word) toꝡä [tʰɔ˧ˈja˧˨ʔa˨˩]
jụ̂aqjuaı [ˈd͡ʑŭʔŭaŋ˧˥˨d͡ʑu˨˩aj˩] juaqjûaı [d͡ʑʊaŋ˧ˈd͡ʑuː˧˥˨aj˨˩]

The value of this proposal, apart from more flexibility and less ambiguity, is that stems no longer alternate between stressed and unstressed depending on whether they have prefixes attached to them (think juıtaq vs. bụjuı). As another pleasant side effect, polyrakuic words in glottal tone are now possible (like äımu, which before was ambiguous with the mid-falling allotonal forms of ạımu and ạ́ımu).

See also