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Proto-Hlai language

Proto-Hlai is the reconstructed ancestor of the Hlai languages. Proto-Hlai reconstructions include those of Matisoff (1988), Thurgood (1991), Wu (2000), Ostapirat (2004), and Norquest (2007).

Proto-Hlai
Reconstruction ofHlai languages
RegionHainan
Reconstructed
ancestor

Phonology

Peter K. Norquest (2007) reconstructs 29 basic Proto-Hlai consonants (Norquest 2007:135), while Weera Ostapirat reconstructs only 19 proto-consonants (Ostapirat 2007:145).

Proto-Hlai Consonants
(Norquest 2007)
Labial Alveolar Postalveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Glottal or Implosive ɓ ɗ k ʔ
Unvoiced Aspirated tʃʰ tɕʰ
Unvoiced Fricative f s
Voiced Fricative C-β ɦ
Unvoiced Nasal ɲ̊ ŋ̊
Voiced Nasal C-m C-n C-ɲ C-ŋ
Unvoiced Lateral ʰl
Voiced Lateral C-l
Tap ɾ
Trill r
Unvoiced Approximant ʍ ȷ̊
Voiced Approximant ʋ

Norquest additionally reconstructs six onsets suggesting consonant clusters: *pl, *fj, *lj, *ɾj, *tʃʰw, *ŋ̊w. Whether these were actual consonant clusters is not clear. The clusters with a glide as a second member may have been coarticulated consonants: palatalized *fʲ, *lʲ, *ɾʲ, labialized *tʃʰʷ, *ŋ̊ʷ, while *pl may have arisen from a sesquisyllable *p-l.

Norquest also reconstructs six bisyllabic root shapes:

  • *Ci + glottal: *Ciʔ-, *Ciɦ-
  • *Cu + glottal: *Cuʔ-, *Cuɦ-
  • *Cu + rhotic: *Cuɾ-, *Cur-

Pretonic syllables are later lost in all Hlai languages, but in these six combinations, they trigger in some languages conditional developments of the tonic syllable's onset consonant, allowing them to be distinguished in reconstruction.

In Ostapirat's (2004) reconstruction, Proto-Hlai forms can be both monosyllabic and disyllabic. Some disyllabic forms have medial consonants beginning with three penultimate vowels (*u-, *i-, *a-; the last of which is default). Vowels can also combine with *-i or *-u to form diphthongs. Tones (*A, *B, *C, *D) are also reconstructed.

In the table below, Proto-Hlai consonants marked as green can occur at the end of syllables.

Proto-Hlai Consonants
(Ostapirat 2004)
Labial Labiodental Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal or
uvular
Nasal m n ɲ ŋ
Unvoiced Stop p t c k ʔ
Voiced Stop b d ɟ ɡ
Unvoiced Fricative s
Approximant w ʋ l j
Trill r ʀ

Ostapirat (2004) reconstructs 5 vowels, which are /a, ə, i, ɨ, u/. Norquest reconstructs seven vowel qualities (Norquest 2007:238, 330).

Proto-Hlai Vowels
(Norquest 2007)
Height Front Central Back
Close *i *iː *ɯː *u *uː
Mid *eː *əː *o
Open *aː

The short vowels *i, , *u, , *o and long *əː only appear in roots with a final consonant (Norquest 2007:330).

Sound changes

The transition from Pre-Hlai (the predecessor of the Proto-Hlai language ancestral to both Hlai and Jiamao) to Proto-Hlai involved the following series of sound changes (Norquest 2007:308). (Order follows that of the table of contents – not intended to be sequential)

  1. Elimination of Uvulars – loss of Pre-Hlai uvulars *q, *C-q, *C-ɢ
  2. Intervocalic Lenition – -p- > -ʋ-, -t- > -ɾ-, -k- > -ɦ-, etc.
  3. Initial Devoicing – loss of voiced fricatives, etc.
  4. Vocalic Transfer – vowel in penultimate syllable moved to last syllable
  5. Initial Aspiration
  6. Monosyllabification – Pre-Hlai, which was sesquisyllabic, was reduced to monosyllabic forms in Proto-Hlai.
  7. Stop and Fricative Affrication – ʈʰ > tʃʰ, cʰ > tɕʰ, etc.
  8. Peripheral Vowel Raising – e(ːC) > i(ːC), o(ːC) > u(ːC), ɛː(C) > eː(C), ɔC > oC
  9. Monophthongization – *ɯa(C) > *ɯə(C) > *ɯː(C), *oːy > *wiː > *iː

Or, in the sequential order given in Norquest (2007:416-417), which excludes monophthongization:

  1. Intervocalic lenition
  2. Elimination of uvulars
  3. Peripheral vowel raising
  4. Initial devoicing
  5. Vocalic Transfer
  6. Initial aspiration
  7. Monosyllabification
  8. Stop and fricative affrication

After evolving from Pre-Hlai, Proto-Hlai initials went through 4 main types of sound changes (Norquest 2007:66).

  1. Temporal compression – reduction of constituents in the syllable; most common
  2. Gesture reduction
  3. Onset fortition – change to initial aspiration, etc.
  4. Systemic realignment – mergers, etc.

After the breakup of Proto-Hlai, the following sound changes occurred in various Hlai branches.

  1. Devoicing
  2. Registrogenesis – creation of tone registers (i.e., register splits); most likely influenced by Hainanese Min Chinese

The following table gives the reflexes of the onset consonants in the Hlai languages, as well as Norquest and Ostapirat's reconstructions:

Norquest Ostapirat Bouhin Ha Em Lauhut Qi group Cunhua Nadouhua Meifu group Run group Notes
Tongzha Zandui Baoting Changjiang Moyfaw Baisha Yuanmen
*b ɓ ɓ ɓ ɓ ɓ ɓ ɓ ɓ
*d ɗ ɗ ɗ ɗ ɗ, ts ɗ ɗ ɗ
*tɕ ts ts ts ts ts ts ts ts t
*k *g k k k k k k k k
*pʰ *p
*tʰ *t tʰ, tsʰ
*kʰ *k
*tɕʰ *c tsʰ tsʰ tsʰ tsʰ tsʰ s tsʰ tsʰ
*tʃʰ *C-t h h
*tʃʰw *Cut f f f f f pfʰ
*f *C-p f f
*fj *Cip f s s A very rare correspondence set, with only one word ('tooth', *fjən) being reflected in both key languages, Cunhua and Changjiang.
*C-β *Cup p f f f ɣ f
*s *s t t t t f s tsʰ *s > t is a late areal change, shared also by the only distantly related Be language.
*C-k h h h h h h h h
*m̥ *C-m m p p p ↓ pʰ ↓ p ↓ ɓ ↓ p ↓ p ↓ p p p ↓ In these correspondence sets, nasality is retained only in Bouhin. Norquest reconstructs prenasalized stops *mb, *nd, *ɲɟ, *ŋg as the proto-non-Bouhin intermediate stage.
*n̥ *C-n n t t t ↓ tʰ ↓ t ↓ ts ↓ t ↓ t ↓ t t t ↓
*ɲ̊ *C-ɲ ɲ ts ts ts ↓ tsʰ ↓ ts ↓ ts ↓ ts ↓ ts ↓ ts ts ts ↓
*ŋ̊ *C-ŋ ŋ k k k ↓ kʰ ↓ k ↓ k ↓ k ↓ k ↓ k k k ↓
*C-m *m m m m m m ↓ m m m m m m ↓
*C-n *n n n n n n ↓ n n n n n n ↓
*C-ɲ ɲ ɲ ɲ ɲ n ↓ ɲ ɲ ŋʲ ɲ ɲ ɲ ↓
*Ciɦ *Cik h h z z With rhinoglottophilia in Cunhua through Run: *Ciɦ > *(Ci)ɦj > *ʔɲ.
*C-ŋ ŋ ŋ ŋ ŋ ŋ ↓ ŋ ŋ ŋ ŋ ŋ ŋ ↓
*Cuŋ *ŋw ŋʷ ŋʷ ŋ, ŋʷ ŋʷ ɱ ↓
*Cuɦ *Cuk h h v ŋ, ŋʷ Rhinoglottophilia in Cunhua through Run: *Cuɦ > *(Cu)ɦw > *ʔŋʷ.
*l̥ *C-l ɗ ɬ ɬ ɬ l ɬ ɬ
*C-l *l l l l l l ↓ l l l l l l ↓
*p-l *p-l pl pl p pl ɓ ↓, l ↓ pʲ ↓ p ↓ pl pl
*C-r r r r r ↓ l ↓ l ↓ l ↓ l ↓ l ↓ r r r ↓
*r *C-ʀ r g g g ↓ h ↓ h ↓ h ↓ ŋ ↓ g ↓ x x
ʔ ʔ ʔ ʔ ʔ ʔ ʔ ʔ
*Ciʔ *Ciʔ ʔʲ z z ʔʲ z ʔʲ z z These onsets (as well as *Ciɦ-, *Cuɦ- above) showing characteristic cheshirization outside of Bouhin and Ha Em.
*Cuʔ *Cuʔ ʔʷ v ʔʷ v ʔʷ ɣ v
*Cur *Cuʀ r g gʷ ↓ v ↓ hʷ ↓ v ↓ ŋ ↓, v ↓ ɣ v
*Cuɾ *Cur r r v f ↓ v ↓ v ↓ f f ↓
*C-ʋ v v f ↓ v ↓ v v ↓ v v v ↓
*Vw v ↓ v
*ŋ̊w h ↓ ŋ ↓, v ↓
*ȷ̊ *Vj z z z z ↓ z ↓ z z z ↓ z ↓ z z z ↓
*lj *il ɬ ↓ l ↓ ts ↓ With *lj > *lʑ > *ɮ > ɬ in Qi (lowered tone still indicating earlier voicing).
*ɾj *Cir z z r t ↓ tʰ ↓ t ↓ z ↓ l ↓ t ↓ t t, ts t, ts ↓

The symbol ↓ indicates here a lowered tone on the following vowel in those Hlai languages where tone split has taken place; this normally occurs following earlier voiced consonants.

See also

References

  • Norquest, Peter K. 2007. A Phonological Reconstruction of Proto-Hlai. Ph.D. dissertation. Tucson: Department of Anthropology, University of Arizona.
  • Norquest, Peter K. 2015. A Phonological Reconstruction of Proto-Hlai. Languages of Asia, Volume 13. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-30052-1
  • Ostapirat, Weera. 2004. "Proto-Hlai Sound System and Lexicons." In Studies on Sino-Tibetan Languages: Papers in Honor of Professor Hwang-cherng Gong on His Seventieth Birthday. Edited by Ying-chin Lin, Fang-min Hsu, Chun-chih Lee, Jackson T.-S. Sun, Hsiu-fang Yang, and Dah-an Ho. Institute of Linguistics. Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan: 121-175.
  • Matisoff, James. 1988. "Proto-Hlai initials and tones: a first approximation." In Comparative Kadai: Linguistic studies beyond Tai. Edited by Jerold A. Edmondson and David B. Solnit. Summer Institute of Linguistics and The University of Texas at Arlington Publications in Linguistics No. 86: 289-321.
  • Thurgood, Graham. 1991. "Proto-Hlai (Li): a look at the initials, tones, and finals." In Kadai: Discussions in Kadai and SE Asian Linguistics III: 1-49.
  • Wu Anqi 吴安其. 2000. "Liyu guyin gouni 黎语古音构拟." In Minzu Yuwen 民族语文 2000(5): 1-13.

Further reading

External links

    proto, hlai, language, proto, hlai, reconstructed, ancestor, hlai, languages, proto, hlai, reconstructions, include, those, matisoff, 1988, thurgood, 1991, 2000, ostapirat, 2004, norquest, 2007, proto, hlaireconstruction, ofhlai, languagesregionhainanreconstru. Proto Hlai is the reconstructed ancestor of the Hlai languages Proto Hlai reconstructions include those of Matisoff 1988 Thurgood 1991 Wu 2000 Ostapirat 2004 and Norquest 2007 Proto HlaiReconstruction ofHlai languagesRegionHainanReconstructedancestorProto Kra Dai Contents 1 Phonology 2 Sound changes 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksPhonology EditPeter K Norquest 2007 reconstructs 29 basic Proto Hlai consonants Norquest 2007 135 while Weera Ostapirat reconstructs only 19 proto consonants Ostapirat 2007 145 Proto Hlai Consonants Norquest 2007 Labial Alveolar Postalveolar Palatal Velar GlottalGlottal or Implosive ɓ ɗ tɕ k ʔUnvoiced Aspirated pʰ tʰ tʃʰ tɕʰ kʰUnvoiced Fricative f sVoiced Fricative C b ɦUnvoiced Nasal m n ɲ ŋ Voiced Nasal C m C n C ɲ C ŋUnvoiced Lateral ʰlVoiced Lateral C lTap ɾTrill rUnvoiced Approximant ʍ ȷ Voiced Approximant ʋNorquest additionally reconstructs six onsets suggesting consonant clusters pl fj lj ɾj tʃʰw ŋ w Whether these were actual consonant clusters is not clear The clusters with a glide as a second member may have been coarticulated consonants palatalized fʲ lʲ ɾʲ labialized tʃʰʷ ŋ ʷ while pl may have arisen from a sesquisyllable p l Norquest also reconstructs six bisyllabic root shapes Ci glottal Ciʔ Ciɦ Cu glottal Cuʔ Cuɦ Cu rhotic Cuɾ Cur Pretonic syllables are later lost in all Hlai languages but in these six combinations they trigger in some languages conditional developments of the tonic syllable s onset consonant allowing them to be distinguished in reconstruction In Ostapirat s 2004 reconstruction Proto Hlai forms can be both monosyllabic and disyllabic Some disyllabic forms have medial consonants beginning with three penultimate vowels u i a the last of which is default Vowels can also combine with i or u to form diphthongs Tones A B C D are also reconstructed In the table below Proto Hlai consonants marked as green can occur at the end of syllables Proto Hlai Consonants Ostapirat 2004 Labial Labiodental Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal or uvularNasal m n ɲ ŋUnvoiced Stop p t c k ʔVoiced Stop b d ɟ ɡUnvoiced Fricative sApproximant w ʋ l jTrill r ʀOstapirat 2004 reconstructs 5 vowels which are a e i ɨ u Norquest reconstructs seven vowel qualities Norquest 2007 238 330 Proto Hlai Vowels Norquest 2007 Height Front Central BackClose i iː ɯ ɯː u uːMid eː e eː oOpen aːThe short vowels i ɯ u e o and long eː only appear in roots with a final consonant Norquest 2007 330 Sound changes EditFor further information about the Pre Hlai language as reconstructed by Norquest 2007 see Proto Tai language Proto Southern Kra Dai The transition from Pre Hlai the predecessor of the Proto Hlai language ancestral to both Hlai and Jiamao to Proto Hlai involved the following series of sound changes Norquest 2007 308 Order follows that of the table of contents not intended to be sequential Elimination of Uvulars loss of Pre Hlai uvulars q C q C ɢ Intervocalic Lenition p gt ʋ t gt ɾ k gt ɦ etc Initial Devoicing loss of voiced fricatives etc Vocalic Transfer vowel in penultimate syllable moved to last syllable Initial Aspiration Monosyllabification Pre Hlai which was sesquisyllabic was reduced to monosyllabic forms in Proto Hlai Stop and Fricative Affrication ʈʰ gt tʃʰ cʰ gt tɕʰ etc Peripheral Vowel Raising e ːC gt i ːC o ːC gt u ːC ɛː C gt eː C ɔC gt oC Monophthongization ɯa C gt ɯe C gt ɯː C oːy gt wiː gt iːOr in the sequential order given in Norquest 2007 416 417 which excludes monophthongization Intervocalic lenition Elimination of uvulars Peripheral vowel raising Initial devoicing Vocalic Transfer Initial aspiration Monosyllabification Stop and fricative affricationAfter evolving from Pre Hlai Proto Hlai initials went through 4 main types of sound changes Norquest 2007 66 Temporal compression reduction of constituents in the syllable most common Gesture reduction Onset fortition change to initial aspiration etc Systemic realignment mergers etc After the breakup of Proto Hlai the following sound changes occurred in various Hlai branches Devoicing Registrogenesis creation of tone registers i e register splits most likely influenced by Hainanese Min ChineseThe following table gives the reflexes of the onset consonants in the Hlai languages as well as Norquest and Ostapirat s reconstructions Norquest Ostapirat Bouhin Ha Em Lauhut Qi group Cunhua Nadouhua Meifu group Run group NotesTongzha Zandui Baoting Changjiang Moyfaw Baisha Yuanmen ɓ b ɓ ɓ ɓ ɓ ɓ ɓ ɓ ɓ ɗ d ɗ ɗ ɗ ɗ ɗ ts ɗ ɗ ɗ tɕ ɟ ts ts ts ts ts ts ts ts t k g k k k k k k k k pʰ p pʰ pʰ pʰ pʰ pʰ pʰ pʰ pʰ tʰ t tʰ tʰ tʰ tʰ tʰ tsʰ tʰ tʰ tʰ kʰ k kʰ kʰ kʰ kʰ kʰ kʰ kʰ kʰ tɕʰ c tsʰ tsʰ tsʰ tsʰ tsʰ s tsʰ tsʰ tʃʰ C t h h tʃʰw Cut f f f f f pfʰ f C p pʰ f f fj Cip pʰ f s s A very rare correspondence set with only one word tooth fjen being reflected in both key languages Cunhua and Changjiang C b Cup p f f f kʷ ɣ f s s t t t t t8 f s tsʰ s gt t is a late areal change shared also by the only distantly related Be language ɦ C k h h h h h h h h m C m m p p p pʰ p ɓ p p p p p In these correspondence sets nasality is retained only in Bouhin Norquest reconstructs prenasalized stops mb nd ɲɟ ŋg as the proto non Bouhin intermediate stage n C n n t t t tʰ t ts t t t t t ɲ C ɲ ɲ ts ts ts tsʰ ts ts ts ts ts ts ts ŋ C ŋ ŋ k k k kʰ k k k k k k k C m m m m m m m m m m m m m C n n n n n n n n n n n n n C ɲ ɲ ɲ ɲ ɲ ɲ n ɲ ɲ ŋʲ ɲ ɲ ɲ Ciɦ Cik h h hʲ z z hʲ With rhinoglottophilia in Cunhua through Run Ciɦ gt Ci ɦj gt ʔɲ C ŋ ŋ ŋ ŋ ŋ ŋ ŋ ŋ ŋ ŋ ŋ ŋ ŋ Cuŋ ŋw ŋʷ ŋʷ ŋ ŋʷ ŋʷ ɱ Cuɦ Cuk h h hʷ gʷ v hʷ ŋ ŋʷ Rhinoglottophilia in Cunhua through Run Cuɦ gt Cu ɦw gt ʔŋʷ l C l ɗ ɬ ɬ ɬ t8 l ɬ ɬ C l l l l l l l l l l l l l p l p l pl pl p pl ɓ l pʲ p pl pl ɾ C r r r r r l l l l l r r r r C ʀ r g g g h h h ŋ g x x kʰ ʔ ʔ ʔ ʔ ʔ ʔ ʔ ʔ ʔ ʔ Ciʔ Ciʔ ʔʲ z z ʔʲ z ʔʲ z z These onsets as well as Ciɦ Cuɦ above showing characteristic cheshirization outside of Bouhin and Ha Em Cuʔ Cuʔ ʔʷ gʷ v ʔʷ v ʔʷ kʷ ɣ v Cur Cuʀ r g gʷ gʷ v hʷ v ŋ v kʷ ɣ v Cuɾ Cur r r v f v v f f ʋ C ʋ v v f v v v v v v ʍ Vw hʷ v v ŋ w h ŋ v ȷ Vj z z z z z z z z z z z z lj il ɬ l ts With lj gt lʑ gt ɮ gt ɬ in Qi lowered tone still indicating earlier voicing ɾj Cir z z r t tʰ t z l t t t ts t ts The symbol indicates here a lowered tone on the following vowel in those Hlai languages where tone split has taken place this normally occurs following earlier voiced consonants See also EditProto Hlai reconstructions Wiktionary Proto Tai language Proto Kra language Proto Austronesian language Austro Tai languagesReferences EditNorquest Peter K 2007 A Phonological Reconstruction of Proto Hlai Ph D dissertation Tucson Department of Anthropology University of Arizona Norquest Peter K 2015 A Phonological Reconstruction of Proto Hlai Languages of Asia Volume 13 Leiden Brill ISBN 978 90 04 30052 1 Ostapirat Weera 2004 Proto Hlai Sound System and Lexicons In Studies on Sino Tibetan Languages Papers in Honor of Professor Hwang cherng Gong on His Seventieth Birthday Edited by Ying chin Lin Fang min Hsu Chun chih Lee Jackson T S Sun Hsiu fang Yang and Dah an Ho Institute of Linguistics Academia Sinica Taipei Taiwan 121 175 Matisoff James 1988 Proto Hlai initials and tones a first approximation In Comparative Kadai Linguistic studies beyond Tai Edited by Jerold A Edmondson and David B Solnit Summer Institute of Linguistics and The University of Texas at Arlington Publications in Linguistics No 86 289 321 Thurgood Graham 1991 Proto Hlai Li a look at the initials tones and finals In Kadai Discussions in Kadai and SE Asian Linguistics III 1 49 Wu Anqi 吴安其 2000 Liyu guyin gouni 黎语古音构拟 In Minzu Yuwen 民族语文 2000 5 1 13 Further reading EditMiyake Marc 2013 The other Kra Dai numerals Parts 1 2 Miyake Marc 2008 Hlai ɯ Miyake Marc 2008 Implosives on Hainan Parts 1 2 Miyake Marc 2008 Hlai initial verification Miyake Marc 2008 Hlai initial glides Miyake Marc 2008 Hlai palatal codas External links EditABVD Proto Hlai word list Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Proto Hlai language amp oldid 1137744041, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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