Afrasianist_phonetic_notation

Afrasianist phonetic notation

Afrasianist phonetic notation

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Comparative work of the Afroasiatic languages uses a semi-conventionalized set of symbols that are somewhat different than the International Phonetic Alphabet and other phonetic notations. The more salient differences include the letters c, ʒ for IPA [ts, dz], the circumflex diacritic ◌̂ for lateral obstruents, and the sub-dot ◌̣ for emphatic consonants, which depending on the language may be ejective, implosive or pharyngealized.

Conventions

Letters

Phonetic conventions are as follows:[1][2][3]

More information AA, IPA ...

is used only for Egyptian. Its value is not certain.

Sometimes IPA letters are used for the above, e.g. ħ for , χ for or j for y, or intermediate notation such as ṭṣ for or ṭɬ̣ for ĉ̣.

Other consonants are familiar from the IPA or may be extended from the patterns in the table (e.g. for [zˁ], š for [ʃ], or for [qʼ]).

Palatal/palatalized consonants are indicated with an acute accent: ś ṣ́ ź ć ć̣ ʒ́ ń ĺ ŕ; retroflex often with a grave accent: l̀ ǹ etc.; and uvulars sometimes with an inverted breve: k̑ h̑ etc. kʷ kᵒ may be distinguished as a labialized consonant vs a consonant followed by a rounded vowel.[4]

There is some inconsistency between authors, often reflecting different phonetic interpretations, e.g. x for [x] and for [χ], or for [x] and x for [kx], or g for [ɡ] and ɡ for [ɢ].

Vowels

ā, ī, ū, ē, ō are long vowels; ǎ etc. are short vowels. ə is a neutral vowel (schwa).

Symbols for reconstruction

Wildcards include:[1]

V for an undetermined vowel: {a, i, u};
H for a laryngeal or pharyngeal consonant: {ḥ, ʕ, ʔ, h};
S for a sibilant: {s, z, c, ʒ, č, ǯ, ṣ, c̣, č̣}.

Thus *bVr- is shorthand for "either *bar- or *bir- or *bur-".

/ means "or", e.g. *gaw/y- is *gaw- or *gay-.
( ) means "with or without", e.g. *ba(w)r- is *bawr- or *bar-.
~ means parallel proto-forms, e.g. *ʕad-at- ~ *ʕidd- means that the proto-form has two variant reconstructions.

See also


References

  1. Alexander Militarev & Olga Stolbova. "Etymological Database of Afrasian languages (AADB)". The Tower of Babel. Center of Comparative Linguistics, Russian State University for the Humanities. Archived from the original on 2021-01-11. Retrieved 2021-06-05.
  2. Igor Diakonoff (1988) Afrasian Languages. Nauka, Moscow.
  3. Aharon Dolgopolsky (1999) From Proto-Semitic to Hebrew. Centro Studi Camito-Semitici di Milano.
  4. Aharon Dolgopolsky (2008) Nostratic Dictionary.

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