Tamil phonology

Last updated

Tamil phonology is characterised by the presence of "true-subapical" retroflex consonants and multiple rhotic consonants. Its script does not distinguish between voiced and unvoiced consonants; phonetically, voice is assigned depending on a consonant's position in a word, voiced intervocalically and after nasals except when geminated. [1] Tamil phonology permits few consonant clusters, which can never be word initial.

Contents

Vowels

Monophthongs of Tamil, from Keane Tamil monophthongs chart.svg
Monophthongs of Tamil, from Keane

The vowels are called உயிரெழுத்துuyireḻuttu ('life letter'). The vowels are classified into short and long (five of each type) and two diphthongs.

The long (netil) vowels are about twice as long as the short (kuṟil) vowels. The diphthongs are usually pronounced about 1.5 times as long as the short vowels, though most grammatical texts place them with the long vowels.

Monophthongs [2]
Front Central Back
shortlongshortlongshortlong
Close i u
Mid e o
Open ä äː

Tamil has two diphthongs: /aɪ̯/ and /aʊ̯/, the latter of which is restricted to a few lexical items. Some like Krishnamurti consider the diphthongs as clusters of /a/ + /j, ʋ/ as they pattern with other VC. [3] The way some words are written also varies e.g. avvai as அவ்வை (avvai), ஔவை (auvai) or அவ்வய் (avvay) (first one most common). Word final /u/ is pronounced as [ɯ~ɨ], it is called a குற்றியலுகரம் (kuṟṟiyalukaram) "short u" (as it has only half a sound unit, compared to 1, 1.5 or 2 of other vowels) in tolkāppiyam and it is unrounded even in literary Tamil; in spoken Tamil it can occur medially as well in some words after the first syllable. Word final [u] occurs in some names, chiefly male nicknames like rājēndraṉ as rāju. [4]

Colloquially, an initial /i(:)/ or /e(:)/ may have a [ʲ] onglide; likewise, an initial /o(:)/ or /u(:)/ may have a [ʷ] onglide, e.g. [ʲeɾi] and [ʷoɾɯ]. [2] This does not occur in Sri Lankan dialects.[ citation needed ]

Indian Colloquial Tamil also has nasalized vowels formed from word final vowel + nasal cluster (except for /Vɳ/ where an epenthetic u is added after it). Long vowel + nasal just nasalizes the vowel, short vowel + nasal may also change the quality, for example, /an/ gets fronted to [ɛ̃] அவன்/aʋan/ becomes [aʋɛ̃] ([aʋæ̃] for some speakers), /am/ gets rounded to [õ] மரம்/maɾam/ becomes [maɾõ], நீங்களும்/niːŋkaɭum/ becomes [n̪iːŋɡaɭũ], வந்தான்/ʋan̪t̪a:n/ becomes [ʋan̪d̪ã:], the remaining vowels only get nasalized. [2] [5]

In spoken Tamil sometimes an epenthetic vowel u is added to words ending in consonants, e.g. nil > nillu, āḷ > āḷu, nāḷ > nāḷu (nā in some dialects), vayal > vayalu etc. If another word is joined at the end, it is deleted. [6]

Colloquially, the high short vowels /i/, /u/ are lowered to [e] and [o] when next to a short consonant and /a,aɪ/. For example, இடம்/iʈam/ becomes [eɖam]; and உடம்பு/uʈampu/ becomes [oɖambɯ]. This is an instance of raising umlaut. It doesn't happen in pronouns and some other words e.g. இவன் ivaṉ and எவன் evaṉ are different words. /aɪ/ also monophthongises to an /e/ but it causes the lowering of /i,u/ before it, e.g. ilai > ele. [5] Additionally, the front long vowels /eː/ and /iː/ are subject to retraction when present in the first syllable of a bisyllabic word and followed by a retroflex consonant. As such, /ʋiːʈu/ "house" becomes [ʋɨːɖɪ̈], but its inflected form /ʋiːʈʈukku/ remains [ʋiːʈ(ː)uk(ː)ɪ̈]. Likewise, /t̪eːʈu/ "search!" becomes [t̪əːɖɪ̈], but /t̪eːʈinaːn/ "(he) searched" remains [t̪eːɖinãː]. The presence and degree of retraction for each vowel may be different; it varies between dialects and even individual speakers. [6] Almost all words end with vowels in spoken Tamil. [5]

For some speakers in spoken Tamil the front vowels /i(:), e(:)/ get rounded to their corresponding rounded back vowels when they are after a labial consonant /m, p, ʋ/ and before a retroflex consonant, some words with it are quite acceptable like பெண் /peɳ/ > பொண்/பொண்ணு [poɳ~poɳ:ɯ] but others like வீடு /ʋi:ʈu/ > வூடு [ʋu:ɖɯ] are less accepted and may even be considered vulgar. [7]

Another change in spoken Tamil is vowel harmony, where vowels change their height to be more similar to nearby vowels: e.g. literary Tamil /koʈu/ > spoken Tamil [kuɖɯ]. [8]

Consonants

The consonants are known as மெய்யெழுத்துmeyyeḻuttu ('body letters'). The consonants are classified into three categories with six in each category: valliṉam ('hard'), melliṉam ('soft' or nasal), and iṭayiṉam ('medium'). Tamil has very restricted consonant clusters (for example, there are no word-initial clusters). There are well defined rules for voicing stops in the written form of Tamil, Centamiḻ (the period of Tamil history before Sanskrit words were borrowed). Stops are voiceless when at the start of a word, in a consonant cluster with another stop and when geminated. They are voiced otherwise.

Tamil is characterized by its use of more than one type of coronal consonants: like many of the other languages of India, it contains a series of retroflex consonants. Notably, the Tamil retroflex series includes the retroflex approximant /ɻ/ () (example Tami; often transcribed 'zh'). Among the other Dravidian languages, the retroflex approximant also occurs in Malayalam (for example in കോഴിക്കോട് 'Kozhikode' /koːɻikkoːɖɨ̆/) and Badaga (for instance, in ಕ್ೞೇಗಿನೆ /kɻeːgɪne/ [9] ). In Telugu, the consonant can be found in inscriptions dated up to 1200 AD and has been substituted with /ɭ/, /ɖ/ or /ɾ/ ever since (although the character is still written and exists in Telugu Unicode block as U+0C34: , as in నోఴంబ 'Nozhamba' /noːɻɐmbɐ/ [10] ) and disappeared from spoken Kannada around 1000 AD (although the character is still written, and exists in Unicode, ೞ as in ಕೊೞೆ 'Kozhe' /koɻe/). In most dialects of colloquial Tamil, this consonant is seen as shifting to the retroflex lateral approximant /ɭ/ in the south and palatal approximant /j/ in the north. [11]

The proto-Dravidian alveolar stop *ṯ developed into an alveolar trill /r/ in the Southern and South Central Dravidian languages while *ṯṯ and *ṉṯ remained (modern ṯṟ, ṉṟ). [12]

[n] and [n̪] are in complementary distribution and are predictable, i.e. they are allophonic. Namely, [n̪] occurs word initially and before /t̪/, while [n] occurs everywhere else. [2]

/ɲ/ is extremely rare word initially and is mostly only found before /t͡ɕ/ word medially; it occurs in geminated form rarely as in aññāṉam, in singular form in one rare word pūñai. Only around 5 words have doubled intervocalic [ŋ], all are different forms of the word aṅṅaṉam "that manner", apart from that [ŋ] only occurs before /k/. [2] [13]

A chart of the Tamil consonant phonemes in the International Phonetic Alphabet follows:

Tamil consonants [2]
Labial Dental Alveolar Retroflex (Alveolo-) palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal m ம்( ) ந் n ன் ɳ ண் ɲ ஞ்( ŋ ) ங்
Plosive/
Affricate
p ப் த்( tːr ற்ற) ʈ ட் t͡ɕ ~ t͡ʃ ச்5 k க்
Fricative ( f )1 s 5ஸ் ( z )1( ʂ )1ஷ்( ɕ )1ஶ்( x )2( h )2ஹ்
Tap ɾ ர்
Trill r ற்
Approximant ʋ வ் ɻ ழ் j ய்
Lateral approximant l ல் ɭ ள்
  1. /f/, /z/, /ʂ/ and /ɕ/ are only found in loanwords and may be considered marginal phonemes, though they are traditionally not seen as fully phonemic.
  2. Intervocalic /k/ is pronounced as [ɣ~h] by Indian Tamils and [x] in Sri Lanka. [14]
  3. For most speakers in spoken Tamil the distinction between the tap and trill is lost except in the southern Kanyakumari dialect. [15]
  4. In most spoken dialects, /rr/ [tːr] merges with /t̪t̪/ while some others keep them as [tːr] . /nr/ merges with /ɳɳ/ if the preceding vowel is short or /ɳ/ if it is long like in literary Tamil. In speech, /parri, onru, muːnru/ are realized as [pat̪t̪i, ʷoɳɳɯ, muːɳɯ]. [16]
  5. /t͡ʃ/ in spoken Tamil varies significantly. Some speakers pronounce it as [s] intervocalically and as an affricate initially, while others have [s] both initially and intervocalically. A final group of speakers has [t͡ʃ] before certain vowels and [s] before others, e.g. சின்ன [t͡ʃin:a] "small" but சாவி [sa:ʋi] "key". [17] However, there are words where the pronunciation is fixed—for example, ceṉṉai and sēlam cannot be pronounced as [senːaɪ̯] and [t͡ʃeːlam]. /t͡ʃː ɲt͡ʃ/ are always [tːʃ n̠ʲd̠ʒ].[ citation needed ]
  6. In spoken Tamil /j/ might cause palatalization to the adjacent consonants and then get assimilated or deleted, e.g. literary Tamil aintu, spoken Tamil añju. [18]
  7. In spoken Tamil intervocalic /k, ʋ/ may be deleted sometimes as in /poːkiraːj/ as [poːrɛ] and sometime /ɻ/ with compensatory lengthening of the vowel as in /poɻut̪u/ as [poːd̪ɯ]. [19] Word finally glides, mainly /j/ are generally deleted unless if the word is monosyllabic where its doubled e.g. cey > seyyi, rūpāy > rūbā. Word final l and ḷ in polysyllabic words are deleted especially in pronouns but reappear when a suffix is added e.g. nīṅkaḷ > nīṅga, similar to French liaison. [20]
  8. l and ḷ gets assimilated to ṟ, ṭ before plosives and ṉ, ṇ before nasals in literary Tamil, e.g. vil, kēḷ, nal, veḷ > viṟka, kēṭka, naṉmai, veṇmai; in spoken Tamil it is deleted and the next consonant is doubled. Before coronal stops, the stops assimilate to the lateral's POA and the lateral is deleted like in the past tense forms of verbs ending with l and ḷ, e.g. kol-ntu, koḷ-ntu, vil-ttu > koṉṟu, koṇṭu, viṟṟu. [21]
  9. As in Proto Dravidian, literary Tamil words can't begin with an alveolar or retroflex consonant but in spoken Tamil some words begin with r and l because of deletion of the initial vowel, e.g. literary Tamil iraṇṭu, spoken Tamil raṇḍu~reṇḍu. [21] In loanwords, a short i, u or a is added before them, e.g. Skt. loka, Tamil ulakam.
  10. In loanwords, the voiced and aspirated plosives are all loaned as the plain plosive. Of the fricatives, h is loaned as k, the sibilants as c, ts as cc and kṣ as ṭc; sometimes s and ṣ are loaned as t and ṭ as in mātam, varuṭam, ilaṭcam (Skt. māsa, varṣa, lakṣa) and kṣ as k(k) or c(c) as in kēttiram~cēttiram, piccai from Sanskrit kṣétra, bhikṣā.
  11. Words can only end with /m, n, ɳ, l, ɭ, ɾ, ɻ, ʋ, j/ in literary Tamil. [22]
  12. Natively the only allowed clusters are C:, PP, NP, RP, RP:, RNP (where P = plosive, N = nasal, R = liquid, : = gemination, C = any consonant) most common are C: and NP; any heterorganic cluster indicates a morpheme boundary. Others clusters occurring in loanwords are split by vowels or simplified, e.g. varṣa > varuṭam. [23]
  13. In Sri Lankan Tamil, word initial voiceless plosives may be aspirated, intervocalic /k/ may be [x~ɣ~h]; word final nasals are always preserved; <c> tends to be an affricate or /ʃ/ or /s/ initially depending on the dialect and speaker; <ṟṟ, nṟ> may be [tt~t̪t̪, nd~ɳɖ]. [24]
  14. Kongu Tamil has word final /ŋ/ as word final /nkV/ becomes /ŋ/, e.g. literary Tamil vāṅka, Kongu Tamil vāṅ.[ citation needed ]

The voiceless consonants are voiced in different positions.

Tamil stop allophones
PlaceInitialGeminateMedialPost-nasal
Velarkg~x~ɣɡ
Palataltʃ,stːɕsdʑ~dʒ
Retroflexʈːɖ~ɽɖ
Alveolartːrr(d)r
Dentalt̪ːd̪~ð
Labialpb~βb

In modern Tamil, however, voiced plosives occur initially in loanwords. Geminate stops get simplified to singleton unvoiced stops after long vowels, suggesting the primary cue is now voicing (cf. kūṭṭam-kūṭam becoming kūṭam-kūḍam in modern speakers). Altogether, we see a shift in progress towards phonemic voicing, more advanced in some dialects than others. [2]

Historically [j] was a possible allophone of medial -c- now the terms with [j] have solidified, compare Kannada which only had [s] as the medial allophone, Tamil ñāyiṟu, Kannada nēsaru. In some cases both remained as in ucir, uyir. There are also cases where the opposite happened due to hypercorrection, eg. Tamil kayiṟu, Madurai Tamil kacaru, kacuru, kaciru even though the word didnt originally have a -c-. There are also cases where it became t mutalai/mutaḷai/mucali, Kannada mosaḷe and disappeared after lengthening the previous vowel nilā, Kodava nelaci. [14]

Āytam

Old Tamil had a phoneme called the āytam , which was written as ‘'. Tamil grammarians of the time classified it as a dependent phoneme (or restricted phoneme [25] ) (cārpeḻuttu). The rules of pronunciation given in the Tolkāppiyam , a text on the grammar of old Tamil, says that the āytam in old Tamil patterned with semivowels and it occurred after a short vowel and before a stop; it either lengthened the previous vowel, geminated the stop or was lost if the following segment is phonetically voiced in the environment. [26] It is said to be the descendant of Proto Dravidian laryngeal *H. The āytam in modern Tamil is used to transcribe foreign phones like ஃப் (ஃp) for [f], ஃஜ (ஃj) for [z], ஃஸ (ஃs) for [z, ʒ] and ஃக (ஃk) for [x], similar to a nuqta.

Overview

Unlike most Indic scripts, Tamil does not have distinct letters for aspirated consonants and they are found as allophones of the normal stops. The Tamil script also lacks distinct letters for voiced and unvoiced stops as their pronunciations depend on their location in a word. For example, the voiceless stop [p] occurs at the beginning of words while the voiced stop [b] cannot. In the middle of words, voiceless stops commonly occur as a geminated pair like -pp-, while voiced stops do not. Only voiced stops can appear medially and after a corresponding nasal. Thus both the voiced and voiceless stops can be represented by the same script in Tamil without ambiguity, the script denoting only the place and broad manner of articulation (stop, nasal, etc.). The Tolkāppiyam cites detailed rules as to when a letter is to be pronounced with voice and when it is to be pronounced unvoiced. The only exceptions to these rules are the letters and as they are pronounced medially as [s] and [r] respectively.

Some loan words are pronounced in Tamil as they were in the source language, even if this means that consonants which should be unvoiced according to the Tolkāppiyam are voiced.

Elision

Elision is the reduction in the duration of sound of a phoneme when preceded by or followed by certain other sounds. There are well-defined rules for elision in Tamil. They are categorised into different classes based on the phoneme which undergoes elision.

1.Kuṟṟiyal ukaram (short nature u) the vowel u
2.Kuṟṟiyal ikaram (short nature i) the vowel i
3.Aikāra k-kuṟukkam (ai shortening) the diphthong ai
4.Aukāra k-kuṟukkam (au shortening) the diphthong au
5.Āyta k-kuṟukkam ( shortening) the special character aḵ (āytam)
6.Makāra k-kuṟukkam (m shortening) the phoneme m

1. Kuṟṟiyal ukaram refers to the vowel /u/ turning into the close back unrounded vowel [ɯ] at the end of words (e.g.: ‘ஆறு’ (meaning ‘six’) will be pronounced [aːrɯ]).

2. Kuṟṟiyal ikaram refers to the shortening of the vowel /i/ before the consonant /j/.

Changes from Proto Dravidian to Standard Tamil

Consonants

  1. Deletion of y initially e.g. PD. *yĀṯu, Ta. āṟu "river", it was preserved in a few words in old Tamil, there are even less in Modern Tamil. [27]
  2. Deletion of c initially through c > s > h > ∅ e.g. PD. *cōṭam > Ta. ōṭam "boat", loaned into Sanskrit as hoḍa. [28] It is an ongoing process in some Gondi dialects. [28]
  3. Palatalization of k to c before non back vowels and if the following consonant isn't retroflex e.g. PD. *kewi, Ta. cevi "ear" but Ta. kēḷ "listen". Sometimes with alveolar consonants too PD. kil-, kīṯ-, kila, Ta. kilukku, kīṟu, cila. [29]
  4. Loss of the laryngeal H e.g. PD. ∗puH- Ta. pū "flower", it survived into old Tamil in a few words as a restricted phoneme called Āytam. According to Tolkāppiyam in old Tamil it patterned with semivowels and it occurred after a short vowel and before a stop; it either lengthened the previous vowel, geminated the stop or was lost if the following segment is phonetically voiced in the environment. [26]
  5. The singular ṯ became a trill ṟ, doubled ṯṯ became ṟṟ [t:r] and ṉṯ became ṉṟ [n(d)r], e.g. PD. *cāṯu, Ta. āṟu "six". However in Sri Lankan Tamil dialects ṯṯ and ṉṯ are preserved in their original forms. For example, SLTa. paṟṟi "about" is pronounced paṯṯi and SLTa. eṉṟa "mine" is pronounced eṉḏa (postnasal voicing of ṯ in ṉṯ).
  6. Many of the ñ- became n- e.g. PD. *ñaṇṭ- Ta. naṇṭu "crab". [30]
  7. m and v alternates in some words e.g. māṉam ~ vāṉam. The word "dravidian" from Sanskrit drāviḍa is said to be from the word tamiḻ with the m becoming v. [31]
  8. Some k alternates with v e.g. makaṉ ~ mavaṉ.

Vowels

  1. Neutralization of ā̆ and ē̆ after y, it also happens to a lesser extent with ñ- and c-. [32]
  2. In proto South-Dravidian, short i, u were lowered to e, o when it was followed by a short consonant and a short a, e.g. PD. *iṯaycci PSD. *eṯaycci; this change was reverted in Proto-Tamil where e, o were raised to i, u, e.g. PSD. *eṯaycci, Ta. iṟaicci; in colloquial Tamil this was again reverted where i, u gets lowered, LT. iṟaicci, ST. erecci (< eraicci). [33]
  3. Some V₁wV₂, V₁kV₂ and V₁yV₂ alternate with V̄₁ e.g. *tokal > tukal ~ tо̄l, *mical/*miyal > mēl, *peyar > peyar ~ pēr. [34]

Sample text

The following text is Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

English

All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.

Tamil

மனிதப் பிறிவியினர் சகலரும் சுதந்திரமாகவே பிறக்கின்றனர்; அவர்கள் மதிப்பிலும், உரிமைகளிலும் சமமானவர்கள், அவர்கள் நியாயத்தையும் மனச்சாட்சியையும் இயற்பண்பாகப் பெற்றவர்கள். அவர்கள் ஒருவருடனொருவர் சகோதர உணர்வுப் பாங்கில் நடந்துகொள்ளல் வேண்டும்.

Romanisation (ISO 15919)

maṉitap piṟiviyiṉar cakalarum cutantiramākavē piṟakkiṉṟaṉar; avarkaḷ matippilum, urimaikaḷilum camamāṉavarkaḷ, avarkaḷ niyāyattaiyum maṉaccāṭciyaiyum iyaṟpaṇpākap peṟṟavarkaḷ. Avarkaḷ oruvaruṭaṉoruvar cakōtara uṇarvup pāṅkil naṭantukoḷḷal vēṇṭum.

IPA

/manit̪ap‿piriʋijinaɾ sagalaɾum sut̪ant̪iɾamaːkaʋeː pirakkinranaɾ ǀ aʋaɾkaɭ mat̪ippilum uɾimai̯kaɭilum samamaːnaʋaɾkaɭ aʋaɾkaɭ nijaːjat̪t̪ai̯jum manat͡ʃt͡ʃaːʈt͡ʃijum ijarpaɳpaːkap‿petːraʋaɾkaɭ ǁ aʋaɾkaɭ oɾuʋaɾuʈanoɾuʋaɾ sakoːt̪aɾa uɳaɾʋup‿paːnkil naʈant̪ukoɭɭal ʋeːɳʈum/

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Allophone</span> Phone used to pronounce a single phoneme

In phonology, an allophone is one of multiple possible spoken sounds – or phones – used to pronounce a single phoneme in a particular language. For example, in English, the voiceless plosive and the aspirated form are allophones for the phoneme, while these two are considered to be different phonemes in some languages such as Central Thai. Similarly, in Spanish, and are allophones for the phoneme, while these two are considered to be different phonemes in English.

A lateral is a consonant in which the airstream proceeds along one or both of the sides of the tongue, but it is blocked by the tongue from going through the middle of the mouth. An example of a lateral consonant is the English L, as in Larry. Lateral consonants contrast with central consonants, in which the airstream flows through the center of the mouth.

Finnish orthography is based on the Latin script, and uses an alphabet derived from the Swedish alphabet, officially comprising twenty-nine letters but also including two additional letters found in some loanwords. The Finnish orthography strives to represent all morphemes phonologically and, roughly speaking, the sound value of each letter tends to correspond with its value in the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) – although some discrepancies do exist.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Digraph (orthography)</span> Pair of characters used to write one phoneme

A digraph or digram is a pair of characters used in the orthography of a language to write either a single phoneme, or a sequence of phonemes that does not correspond to the normal values of the two characters combined.

The phonology of Catalan, a Romance language, has a certain degree of dialectal variation. Although there are two standard varieties, one based on Central Eastern dialect and another one based on South-Western or Valencian dialect, this article deals with features of all or most dialects, as well as regional pronunciation differences.

The phonology of Italian describes the sound system—the phonology and phonetics—of Standard Italian and its geographical variants.

The phonology of Japanese features a phonemic inventory of about 15 consonants, plus a five-vowel system of commonly seen in other languages. There is a relatively simple phonotactic distribution of phonemes, allowing for few consonant clusters. Traditionally, autochthonous Japanese linguistics has described the language as having a unit of timing called the mora, with each mora taking up about the same length of time. In this way, the disyllabic may be analyzed as, dissected into four moras:, ,, and.

The phonology of the Persian language varies between regional dialects, standard varieties, and even from older variates of Persian. Persian is a pluricentric language and countries that have Persian as an official language have separate standard varieties, namely: Standard Dari (Afghanistan), Standard Iranian Persian and Standard Tajik (Tajikistan). The most significant differences between standard varieties of Persian are their vowel systems. Standard varieties of Persian have anywhere from 6 to 8 vowel distinctions, and similar vowels may be pronounced differently between standards. However, there are not many notable differences when comparing consonants, as all standard varieties a similar amount of consonant sounds. Though, colloquial varieties generally have more differences than their standard counterparts. Most dialects feature contrastive stress and syllable-final consonant clusters.

This article describes the phonology of the Somali language.

This article discusses the phonological system of the Czech language.

Unlike many languages, Icelandic has only very minor dialectal differences in sounds. The language has both monophthongs and diphthongs, and many consonants can be voiced or unvoiced.

The Gujarati language is an Indo-Aryan language native to the Indian state of Gujarat. Much of its phonology is derived from Sanskrit.

The phonemic inventory of Maldivian (Dhivehi) consists of 29 consonants and 10 vowels. Like other modern Indo-Aryan languages the Maldivian phonemic inventory shows an opposition of long and short vowels, of dental and retroflex consonants as well as single and geminate consonants.

Debuccalization or deoralization is a sound change or alternation in which an oral consonant loses its original place of articulation and moves it to the glottis. The pronunciation of a consonant as is sometimes called aspiration, but in phonetics, aspiration is the burst of air accompanying a stop. The word comes from Latin bucca, meaning "cheek" or "mouth".

Hindustani is the lingua franca of northern India and Pakistan, and through its two standardized registers, Hindi and Urdu, a co-official language of India and co-official and national language of Pakistan respectively. Phonological differences between the two standards are minimal.

Nepali is the national language of Nepal. Besides being spoken as a mother tongue by more than 48% of the population of Nepal, it is also spoken in Bhutan and India. The language is recognized in the Nepali constitution as an official language of Nepal.

The phonology of Burmese is fairly typical of a Southeast Asian language, involving phonemic tone or register, a contrast between major and minor syllables, and strict limitations on consonant clusters.

This article discusses the phonology of the Inuit languages. Unless otherwise noted, statements refer to Inuktitut dialects of Canada.

Konkani is a southern Indo-Aryan language belonging to the Indo-European family of languages spoken in the Konkan coastal region of India. It has approximately 3.6 million speakers.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sardinian phonology</span> Phonology of the Sardinian language

Sardinian is conventionally divided, mainly on phonological criteria, into three main varieties: Campidanese, Logudorese, and Nuorese. The last of these has a notably conservative phonology, compared not only to the other two varieties, but also to other Romance languages as well.

References

  1. Schiffman, Harold F.; Arokianathan, S. (1986), "Diglossic variation in Tamil film and fiction", in Krishnamurti, Bhadriraju; Masica, Colin P. (eds.), South Asian languages: structure, convergence, and diglossia, New Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, pp. 371–382, ISBN   81-208-0033-8 at p. 371
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Keane (2004).
  3. Krishnamurti (2003), p. 48.
  4. Schiffman (1999), p. 5-6.
  5. 1 2 3 Schiffman (1999), p. 4.
  6. 1 2 Schiffman (1999), p. 5.
  7. Schiffman (1999), p. 19.
  8. Schiffman (1999), p. 20.
  9. Badaga Bible - Gospel of Mark (1896)
  10. Unicode 0C34 TELUGU LETTER LLLA, Suresh Kolichala, Nagarjuna Venna, Vinodh Rajan, Shriramana Sharma
  11. Rajam (1992).
  12. Krishnamurti (2003), p. 146.
  13. Krishnamurti (2003).
  14. 1 2 Krishnamurti (2003), p. 149.
  15. Schiffman (1999), p. 7.
  16. Schiffman (1999), p. 9, 14.
  17. Schiffman (1999), p. 9-10.
  18. Schiffman (1999), p. 16.
  19. Schiffman (1999), p. 8, 10.
  20. Schiffman (1999), p. 9, 6.
  21. 1 2 Krishnamurti (2003), p. 94.
  22. Krishnamurti (2003), p. 53.
  23. Zvelebil - Dravidian Linguistics - An Introduction (1990) pg. 12
  24. Zvelebil (1965).
  25. Krishnamurti 2003 , p. 154
  26. 1 2 Krishnamurti (2003), p. 154-155.
  27. Krishnamurti (2003), p. 142.
  28. 1 2 Krishnamurti (2003), p. 122.
  29. Krishnamurti (2003), p. 128.
  30. Krishnamurti (2003), p. 139.
  31. Zvelebil - Dravidian Linguistics - An Introduction (1990)
  32. Krishnamurti (2003), p. 99.
  33. Krishnamurti (2003), p. 101, 173.
  34. Krishnamurti (2003), p. 96.

Bibliography