Glides LCDD 21 Mathew Far West Muria Phonology Summary
6 syllabic
[ i̯]
and, [
u̯] , respectively. Such
[i̯ɽ] and,
[u̯ɽ] , sequences are interpreted
as i
ṛ and
u ṛ
, there being no reason to interpret [
ɽ] as a vowel since it occurs
elsewhere in our data as a unit consonant. The occurrence of [
ɽ] as syllabic is
accounted for by its flapped articulatory feature: the flapping movement of [
ɽ] preceding a following plosive stop consonant reduces short unstressed vowels in
the immediately preceding environment to non-syllabic vowels. It also happens that when
[ ɽ]
is followed by a voiceless plosive, a preceding non-syllabic [i̯]
or [
u̯] may be echoed in the space following syllabic
[ ɽ]
as a non-syllabic vowel, [i̯]
or [u̯]
. However, when
[ ɽ]
is followed by a sonorant, for example m
, the preceding non-syllabic
[i̯] or
[ u̯]
is echoed following [
ɽ] in the space preceding
m as a
fully syllabic [i]
or [u]
. In such instances [
ɽ] is not strictly syllabic since it occurs
as syllable onset rather than syllable nucleus. Note the following examples and placement of word-stress. The syllabic nucleus,
ṛ , in the first two examples is
stressed. The first example is pronounced as a bisyllabic word, the second, third, and fourth examples are pronounced as monosyllabic words.
u ṛpna
उळपना
[u̯ɽu̯pˑna] remove
0879 u
ṛk
उळक
[u̯ɽu̯kˑ] urinate
0643 u
ṛm
उळम
[u̯ɽumˑ][uɽuːm] louse
0889 hi
ṛnj
�हळंू
[hi̯ɽi̯ɲdʒˑ] fingernail
0007
Except for one example in section 5.1, others in the subsection describing the vowels
i , and
u
in section 5.2, and those in section 9 on Stress, non-syllabic
vowels such as [
i̯] ,
[ u̯]
, and [
ə̯] have not been represented in our phonetic
transcription whether occurring in the environment of ṛ
or r
, or occurring at the junction of consonants within non-homorganic -CC- and -CCC- clusters.